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Interim Report - Report No 306, March 1997

Case No 1896 (Colombia) - Complaint date: 07-MAY-96 - Closed

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Allegations: Murders and other acts of violence against trade union officials and members, acts of anti-union discrimination and refusal to reorganize the representativity of a trade union organization

  • Allegations: Murders and other acts of violence against trade union officials and members, acts of anti-union discrimination and refusal to reorganize the representativity of a trade union organization
    1. 248 The Committee last examined Case No. 1761 at its March 1995 meeting (see 297th Report, paras. 451-464). The Latin American Central of Workers (CLAT) sent additional information in communications dated 2 and 8 May and 31 July 1995. The Government sent partial observations in communications dated 29 August and 9 October 1995.
    2. 249 The Committee last examined Case No. 1787 at its June 1996 meeting (see 304th Report, paras. 159-178). The International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) subsequently submitted additional information in communications dated 20 and 28 May and 18 July 1996.
    3. 250 The complaint corresponding to Case No. 1896 is contained in a communication from the Latin American Central of Workers (CLAT) dated 7 May 1996.
    4. 251 At its meeting in December 1995, the Committee of Experts on the Application of Conventions and Recommendations made an observation on the application by Colombia of the Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98) and requested the Government to take measures to bring its legislation in line with the Convention. During the discussion of the case concerning the application of this Convention by Colombia at the meeting of the Conference Committee on the Application of Standards in June 1996, the Minister of Labour and Social Security, Orlando Obregón Sabogal, invited the ILO to carry out a mission in his country with a view to promoting trade union rights and social dialogue. Subsequently, the Government decided to extend the mandate of the mission to the cases pending before the Committee on Freedom of Association of the Governing Body (Cases Nos. 1761, 1787 and 1896).
    5. 252 The above-mentioned mission was carried out from 7-11 October 1996 by Santiago Pérez del Castillo, Professor of Labour Law from the University of Uruguay, accompanied by Horacio Guido, official of the Freedom of Association Branch of the International Labour Standards Department and Luis Zamudio, specialist in international labour standards of the Multidisciplinary Advisory Team based in Lima, Peru (see the report of the mission in Annex II). The Government submitted observations on the three cases pending to the mission.
    6. 253 Colombia has ratified both the Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organise Convention, 1948 (No. 87) and the Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98).

A. A. The complainants' allegations

A. A. The complainants' allegations
  • Case No. 1761
  • Previous examination of the case
    1. 254 During the previous examination of the case, when it dealt with allegations concerning the murder of trade union officials and the judicial proceedings of trade unionists, the Committee made the following recommendations (see 297th Report, para. 464):
  • Recalling that the rights of workers' and employers' organizations can be exercised only in a climate that is free from violence, pressure or threats of any kind against these organizations' leaders and members, and that it is the responsibility of governments to guarantee respect for this principle, the Committee urges the Government to take steps to ensure that judicial inquiries are carried out immediately to clarify all the alleged facts, determine responsibilities and punish the authors of the assassination of the trade union officials Rodrigo Rojas Acosta, Alberto Alvarado, Tina Soto Castellanos and Rosario Moreno, as well as the assassination of Hugo Zapata Restrepo and the serious wounds sustained by Carlos Posada during the search of the headquarters of the Single Federation of Workers of Antioquía (FUTRAN). The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of the outcome of each of the inquiries undertaken, and of the outcome of inquiries being conducted into the assassination of trade union officials Perea Israel and Camelo Reinaldo Miguel;
  • The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of the outcome of the current trials of Mr. Luna, Mr. Chaparro and Mr. Patiño and to send it the text of the judgements handed down.
    1. 255 Similarly, given the failure of the Government to reply to certain allegations submitted, the Committee made the following recommendation:
  • The Committee requests the Government to send complete observations on the following allegations as soon as possible: (1) the arrest of eight union officials (Ortega García Jorge Luis, Tovar Arrieta Domingo Rafael, Triviño Flavio, Orozco Nassam Luis Ferdando, Martínez César, Quiceno Evelio, Escobas Héctor and Ronancio Germán) on 12 February 1994 in Mesitas; (2) the expulsion of workers from the headquarters of the Construction Workers' Trade Union (SINDICONS) on 11 February 1994 in Cali; (3) the carrying out of visits by members of the state security to trade union meetings and headquarters, for example the Congress of the National Federation of Construction and Cement Workers, which was held in Bogotá between 9 and 12 February 1994; and (4) the activities of paramilitary groups in Medellín that are preventing the normal exercise of trade union activities.
  • Additional information submitted by the CLAT
    1. 256 In its communications dated 2 and 8 May 1995, the CLAT alleges the murders of two trade union officials: Guillermo Alonso Benítez Zapata, legal adviser of the Workers' Union of Olimpo Ltd. (SINTRAOLIMPO), on 26 April 1995 in front of his home in the town of Chigorobo, Antioquía, and Marco Julio Martínez Quiceno, executive of the Workers' Union of Skanska, on 3 May 1995, at his home in the municipality of Tierralta, Córdoba.
    2. 257 In its communication of 31 July 1995, the CLAT alleges that the trade union official, Fernando Alfonso Davila Girón, president of the State Enterprise Workers' Union of Tuluá, disappeared on 26 November 1994 and that his relations announced his disappearance to the First Office of the General Prosecutor of Tuluá (anti-abduction unit).
  • The Government's reply
    1. 258 In its communications dated 29 August and 9 October 1995, the Government states that the Office of the General Prosecutor of the Nation had carried out inquiries in connection with the disappearance of Fernando Alfonso Davila Girón, that these were at the initial stage and that it would, in due course, communicate all information it might have been able to obtain in this respect.
    2. 259 The Government handed over to the mission documentation provided by the Office of the General Prosecutor concerning the allegations on acts of violence against trade union officials and members which, in particular, contained the following information:
      • (i) judicial inquiries are being carried out in connection with the murders of the trade union officials Rodrigo Rojas Acosta, Alberto Alvarado, Tina Soto Castellanos and Rosario Moreno, Hugo Zapata Restrepo, Guillermo Alonso Benítez Zapata and Marco Julio Martínez Quiceno; they are also being carried out in connection with the serious injuries inflicted on Carlos Posada during the search of the headquarters of the Single Federation of Workers of Antioquía (FUTRAN);
      • (ii) concerning the alleged arrest of trade union officials, the Government gave details on those listed here below:
        • - Ortega García Jorge Luis (judicial inquiries are being carried out to look into threats made against him as well as the charge of rebellion brought against him; he is at present free);
        • - Tovar Arrieta Domingo Rafael (judicial inquiries are under way to look into charges that he was kidnapped and threatened);
        • - Orozco Nassan Luis Fernando (judicial inquiries are under way to look into the charge that he was a victim of extortion); and
        • - Martínez César (judicial inquiries are under way to determine whether he was a victim of extortion and the charge of kidnapping brought against him).
      • Case No. 1787 Previous examination of the case
    3. 260 During its previous examination of the case, when examining allegations concerning the murders and disappearances of/and other acts of violence against trade union officials and members, the Committee made the following recommendations (see 304th Report, para. 178(a)):
  • ... expressing its deep concern at the increasing climate of violence in the country and the large number of murders and acts of violence against trade union officials and members, the Committee urges the Government to take immediately the necessary steps for the initiation of judicial investigations to elucidate all the alleged murders, threats and other acts of violence, establish who was responsible for them and punish the guilty parties. The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed in this respect. Furthermore, the Committee urges the Government to intensify its efforts to provide effective protection for all the trade union officials and members who have received threats. The Committee requests the Government to provide information on all the cases referred to in the annex (which is reproduced here below):
  • Allegations pending in March 1995
  • Murders:
    1. (1) Jaime Elicier Ojeda (President of the Public Works Trade Union - SINTRAMINOBRAS) (the Government reported that judicial investigations had begun);
    2. (2) Alfonso Noguera (President of the Trade Union of Municipal Workers of the municipality of Ocaña) (the Government reported that judicial investigations had begun);
    3. (3) Hernando Cuadros (President of the Tibú Branch of the Workers' Trade Union - USO).
  • Attempted murder:
    1. (1) Trade union members Edgar Riaño, Darío Lotero, Luis Hernández and Monerge Sánchez.
  • Death threats:
    1. (1) Bertina Calderón (Vice-President of CUT);
    2. (2) Daniel Rico (President of the Federation of Petroleum Workers - FEDEPETROL);
    3. (3) Domingo Tovar (member of the CUT National Executive);
    4. (4) Víctor Ramírez (President of the Transport Workers' Union - SINTRASON);
    5. (5) Members of the Executive Committee of the Single Agricultural Trade Union Federation - FENSUAGRO).
  • Death threats and attempted murder:
    1. (1) Francisco Ramírez Cuéllar (President of the Trade Union of Workers of the Mineralco SA enterprise).
  • Detention and raids on homes:
    1. (1) Luis David Rodríguez Pérez (former leader of the National Trade Union of Workers of Incora - SINTRADIN).
  • Raids on union headquarters, telephone tapping, surveillance of trade union members:
    1. (1) A raid on the headquarters of the Single Agricultural Trade Union Federation (FENSUAGRO), the tapping of telephones in the union headquarters and of members' telephones and surveillance of the President of the Federation, Luis Carlos Acero by armed persons.
  • Additional information presented by the complainant organization in a communication dated 20 October 1995
  • Murders:
    1. (1) Ernesto Fernández Pezter, trade union leader of the Association of Teachers of César on 20 February 1995;
    2. (2) Manuel Francisco Giraldo, member of the Executive Committee of the National Trade Union of Workers in the Agricultural Industry (SINTRAINAGRO) on 22 March 1995;
    3. (3) Pedro Bermúdez, member of the workers' committee of the La Playa banana plantation, municipality of Carepa, department of Urabá on 6 June 1995;
    4. (4) Artur Moreno, member of the workers' committee of the Doña Francia plantation, municipality of Apartadó on 7 June 1995;
    5. (5) Antonio Moreno, treasurer of the Trade Union of Workers in the Agricultural Industry (SINTRAINAGRO) on 12 August 1995;
    6. (6) Manuel Ballesta, negotiator for the Trade Union of Workers of the Agricultural Industry (SINTRAINAGRO) on 12 August 1995;
    7. (7) 23 workers who were members of the National Trade Union of Workers in the Agricultural Industry (SINTRAINAGRO) on 29 August 1995;
    8. (8) William Gustavo Jaime Torres, President of the National Farmworkers' Association (ANUC) on 12 August 1995;
    9. (9) 24 workers from the Rancho Amelia banana farm who were members of the National Trade Union of Workers in the Agricultural Industry on 20 September 1995.
  • Disappearances:
    1. (1) Rodrigo Rodríguez Sierra, President of the Trade Union of Oil-producing Workers (SINTRAPROACEITES), Copey branch, on 16 February 1995;
    2. (2) Jairo Navarro, trade union member, on 6 June 1995.
  • Physical aggression and police repression:
    1. (1) Police repression against workers from the Empresas Públicas de Cartagena during a peaceful demonstration on 29 June 1995;
    2. (2) Police repression against workers from the Empresas de Acueductos y Teléfonos and organized peasants from Tolima who were holding a protest meeting on 14 August 1995. The repression resulted in the death of Fernando Lombana who was a member of the Association of Farmers of Small and Medium-sized Holdings in Tolima (ASOPEMA), the serious injury of three other persons and several arrests (trade union members belonging to the organizations that took part in the protest).
  • Threats against:
    1. (1) Pedro Barón, President of the Tolima branch of the Single Confederation of Workers of Colombia (CUT) by members of the armed forces following his participation in a protest strike on 19 July 1995;
    2. (2) Domingo Tovar, member of the Association of Teachers of Sucre, who was arrested by members of the army and accused of being a subversive on 12 February 1994. The judicial authorities later ordered his release. He received a death threat on 8 August 1995 and following an attempt on his life had to leave the country for several months;
    3. (3) Jorge Ortega García, trade union member, who was arrested by members of the army and accused of being a subversive on 12 February 1994. The judicial authorities later ordered his release. He subsequently received a death threat and is being followed by members of the security forces who are keeping his office under surveillance.
    4. 261 Furthermore, when examining allegations on anti-union discrimination, the Committee made the following recommendations (see 304th Report, para. 178(b), (c) and (d)):
  • ... recalling that protection against anti-union discrimination must be provided, in particular against all acts to dismiss workers or prejudice them in any other way by reason of their trade union membership or activities, the Committee requests the Government to take the necessary steps to carry out an immediate investigation into the ALFAGRES S.A. enterprise and, in the event that the alleged acts of discrimination are proven, to reinstate the trade union officials who were dismissed, and to take steps to put an end to the threats or any other form of prejudice against workers belonging to the trade union. The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed in this respect;
  • ... with regard to the Trade Union of Government and Public Administration Workers (SINTRHA), the Committee requests the Government to send, without delay, its observations on the allegations concerning the suppression of the posts of trade union officials and members, encouragement by the Government in public administration of an anti-union campaign to intimidate workers who wished to join the union, and the dismissal of members of the Executive Committee of the SINTRHA enterprise. The Committee requests the complainant organization to send its comments on the statement made by the Government concerning the refusal to register the amendments to the SINTRHA statutes; and
  • ... recalling that the Government was previously requested to take the necessary measures to enable trade union leaders and members of the SINTRATEXTILIA trade union dismissed for their legitimate trade union activities to secure reinstatement in their posts, the Committee urges the Government to take measures to this end and to keep it informed in this respect.
  • Additional information from the complainant
    1. 262 In its communications dated 20 and 28 May and 18 July 1996, the ICFTU alleges various murders of trade union officials and members. In particular, the complainant organization states that:
      • - Francisco Mosquera Córdoba and Carlos Arroyo de Arco, workers in the Darién timberworks, were murdered in February 1996 after a meeting at which discussions were held on the drafting of a list of claims to be discussed with the enterprise;
      • - members of the National Trade Union of Workers in the Agricultural Industry (SINTRAINAGRO) Francisco Antonio Usuga (regional conductor of SINTRAINAGRO in the municipality of Carepa), José Silvio Gómez (activities coordinator in Banafinca), Alvaro David (member of the workers' committee of the Los Planes estate) and Oriol Chaverra (foreman of the La Argentina estate) were murdered on 22 March 1996 in various places in the banana-growing region of Urabá;
      • - members of the National Trade Union of Workers in the Agricultural Industry (SINTRAINAGRO), Hernán Correra (national treasurer), Medardo Cuestas (head of the subsecretariat of Turbo), Manuel Márquez (Apartadó branch treasurer), Pedro Barbosa (press secretary), Omar Casarubio (Apartadó branch member), Fernando Pérez (vice-chairman of the Apartadó branch) and Amin Palacio (member of the Turbo sub-executive), were murdered on 14 April 1996, in Curulao, in the town of Turbo;
      • - Armando Umanes Petro, member of the Córdoba Teachers' Association, was murdered on 23 May 1996 in the town of Montería;
      • - Jairo Alfonso Gamboa López and all the other members of the executive of the Trade Union of Workers of the Titán S.A. enterprise, in the municipality of Yumbo, received death threats from a paramilitary group known as "Colombia without guerrillas" (COLSINGUE);
      • - Alvaro Hoyos Pabón, member of the Trade Union of Workers of the Titán S.A. enterprise, in the municipality of Yumbo, was murdered on 12 December 1995;
      • - Libardo Antonio Acevedo Q., president of the Regional Trade Union Federation of Free Workers of the Cauca Valley (FESTRALVA), treasurer of the Trade Union of Workers of the Colombina S.A. enterprise (SINTRACOLOMBINA) and member of the National Executive of the CTC, was murdered on 7 July 1996 in the town of Tuluá;
      • - on 7 July 1996 unidentified persons set off an explosive device at the headquarters of the National Construction Workers' Trade Union (SINDICONS) in Medellín.
    2. The Government's reply
    3. 263 In its communication of September 1996, the Government once again states that inquiries are being carried out in connection with the death of the trade unionists Luis Noguera Cano and Eliecer Ojeda Cano. Furthermore, the Government points out that a person has been detained and is being tried in connection with the inquiries into the death of Luis Noguera Cano.
    4. 264 The Government handed over to the mission much information on acts of violence against trade union officials or trade union members, or against trade union premises. In particular, the Government states that judicial inquiries have begun in connection with the following murders of trade union officials or trade union members: (1) Antonio Moreno; (2) Manuel Ballesta; (3) Francisco Mosquera Córdoba; (4) Carlos Arroyo de Arco, (5) Francisco Antonio Usuga; (6) Pedro Luis Bermúdez Jaramillo; (7) Armando Umanes Petro; (8) William Gustavo Jaimes Torres; (9) Ernesto Fernandez Pezter.
    5. 265 In addition, the Government states that inquiries are being carried out in connection with the explosion at the headquarters of the National Construction Workers' Trade Union (SINDICONS) in Medellín.
    6. 266 As regards the alleged murders of the trade union members belonging to SINTRAINAGRO, Oriol Chaverra, Hernán Correra, Medardo Cuestas, Manuel Márquez, Pedro Barbosa, Omar Casarubio, Fernando Pérez and Amin Palacio, the Government states that these persons are alive and that they have not lodged any complaints that attempts have been made on their lives.
    7. 267 Concerning the allegations on the arrest of and death threats made against the trade union officials Domingo Tovar and Jorge Ortega García, the Committee analyses the Government's comments within the framework of Case No. 1761.
    8. 268 Concerning the allegations that had remained pending on acts of anti-union discrimination, the Government informed the mission of the following:
      • - Alfagres S.A. enterprise: the Government states that it received a verbal complaint against this enterprise for the alleged dismissal of workers and infringements of the right of freedom of association and that, following the corresponding inquiries carried out by the inspection and supervision department, resolution No. 001682, issued on 23 May 1995, which stated that: "the enterprise did not infringe the right of freedom of association and the parties are free to bring the matter before the ordinary labour courts". The Government adds that in a letter dated 31 May, a number of trade unionists stated that they were withdrawing their complaint lodged with the administrative authorities and that on 2 June 1995, other trade unionists pointed out that a number of founder members of SINTRALFA negotiated their termination after being dismissed by the employers. The Government points out that, subsequently, these founder members initiated proceedings in support of fuero sindical (trade union immunity) and reinstatement against the defendant ALFAGRES S.A. enterprise, which are being dealt with by the court which tries civil and criminal cases in the jurisdiction of the municipality of Soacha (Cundinamarca).
      • - Textilia Ltd. enterprise: concerning the allegations of anti-union dismissals carried out in this enterprise, the Government points out that the president and secretary-general of SINTRATEXTILIA withdrew their complaint of trade union persecution against the Textilia enterprise, taking into account that a criminal complaint had been lodged against the management of the enterprise and that the dismissed workers had brought the matter before the labour courts. The Government adds that a number of trade unionists (whose names are given by the Government) had initiated legal proceedings in support of fuero sindical (trade union immunity) and reinstatement.
      • - Ministry of Finance: concerning the allegations pending of anti-union discrimination against union officials and members of the Trade Union of the Government and Public Administration Workers (SINTRHA), the Government points out that: (1) the jobs of trade union members and officials had not been cut with a view to destroying the trade union, but had been the result of restructuring within the Ministry affecting many workers; (2) a woman official of the Ministry had undeniably stirred up an anti-union campaign, but this situation had been corrected; and (3) the three members of the union executive who were dismissed as a result of the restructuring have initiated legal proceedings.
    9. Case No. 1896
  • The complainant's allegations
    1. 269 In its communication dated 7 May 1996, the Latin American Central of Workers (CLAT) states that on 23 February 1996 the Ministry of Labour drew up Resolution No. 00431 referring to a census carried out in the National Telecommunications Enterprise of Colombia (TELECOM) concerning the representativity of trade union organizations operating within this enterprise. According to the complainant organization, the resolution stated that the Trade Union of Workers of the National Telecommunications Enterprise (SITTELECOM) had a total of 1,779 members as of 30 November 1995; this trade union rejected the census carried out by the Ministry of Labour, alleging that it had 4,471 active members (the enterprise upholds these figures by providing the list of check-offs for trade union contributors). The trade union organization explains that it should be borne in mind that the other organization representing TELECOM workers is the TELECOM Technicians Association (ATT), an organization which only represents technicians. SITTELECOM, on the other hand, covers various types of workers in the enterprise. In the census, the ATT is represented as being the majority organization in terms of membership (1,804) and therefore authorized by law to discuss the list of claims and sign a new collective labour agreement. Finally, the complainant organization alleges that the official figures presuppose the modernization of SITTELECOM whilst depriving it of the legitimate right to exercise its trade union prerogatives.
  • The Government's reply
    1. 270 The Government informs the mission that on 23 February 1996 the Ministry of Labour and Social Security issued Resolution No. 00431 through the Labour Department, which stated that the Union of Workers of the National Telecommunications Enterprise "SITTELECOM" had 1,779 members as at 30 November 1995 and that the TELECOM Technicians Association (ATT) had 1,804 members, out of a total of 8,710 workers employed by the National Telecommunications Enterprise TELECOM. The Government adds that these figures are not final but it was necessary to draw them up because of the appeal lodged by the trade union organization SITTELECOM. The Government points out that the census was carried out at the request of the TELECOM enterprise in order to establish the trade union representation with a view to collective bargaining, in accordance with the provisions contained in article 357, paragraph 2, of the Labour Code which states that when a basic trade union and an industrial trade union exist alongside each other within the same enterprise, the representation of the workers for all purposes of collective bargaining will lie with the trade union grouping the majority (half minus one) of the workers in the enterprise.
    2. 271 Furthermore, the Government points out that this trade union census was carried out whilst taking account of the following:
      • - the statutes of each of the trade union organizations, stipulating the conditions or requirements for membership, which establish: Union of Workers of the National Telecommunications Enterprise "SITTELECOM". Chapter III. Admission requirements. Article 60. Membership requirements: to be a worker in the National Telecommunications Enterprise and have completed the period of apprenticeship; be more than 14 years of age; submit a request for membership in writing to the Executive Committee, which gives its approval or not as the case may be. TELECOM Technicians' Association (ATT). Chapter III. Membership requirements. Article 40. Any Colombian worker involved in telecommunications activities in the public or private sector may belong to the ATT. Paragraph. In order to be accepted as a member, the worker must submit a written request and agree to abide by the statutes;
      • - in the case of SITTELECOM, as the census was at national level, the various regional boards under the Ministry were requested to count the number of TELECOM workers belonging to SITTELECOM in their respective jurisdictions. These boards were instructed to monitor compliance with the statutes of the trade union organization for membership. Subsequently, only those members in the various regional boards of the country counted as being members of SITTELECOM, if they had complied with the compulsory trade union regulations for membership; in other words, any workers failing to comply with the requirements contained in these regulations - such as the obligation to submit a request for membership in writing to the Executive Committee and approval by that body - were not counted as being members of the trade union. These statutes regulate the activities of SITTELECOM, which indeed were approved by this trade union;
      • - in the case of the ATT, given that the relevant documentation was centralized in the city of Santafé de Bogotá D.C., the regional boards under this Ministry were not involved in the census and it was carried out by the Regional Labour Board of the capital city; only those officials who had fulfilled the requirements laid down in the statutes were considered members of this trade union. As mentioned earlier in the text, the only requirement consists of submitting a written request and acceptance of the statutes;
      • - under sections 377 and 393 of the Labour Code, the trade union organizations must, amongst other things, keep a register of members and of the Executive Committee, duly sealed and numbered by the labour inspector. However, the majority of branches of the trade union organization SITTELECOM, including the branch of Santafé de Bogotá D.C., did not submit a list of its members; even when they did submit a list, most of those on the list had not been duly accepted as members by the Executive Committee - according to the minutes of the Committee - which also in various branches had not been authenticated;
      • - once the name and number of persons duly belonging to the trade union had been established in accordance with the statutes of each trade union organization, the names of these persons were compared with the names on the payroll submitted by TELECOM; however, the findings of the census were rejected and are the object of this complaint.
    3. 272 The Government stresses that the fact that the employer submits a list of workers paying trade union dues does not automatically mean that those paying the contributions are a member of the trade union because, under section 471 of the Labour Code, when a trade union is party to a collective agreement and its members account for more than a third of the workers in the enterprise, the agreement applies to all workers in the enterprise - irrespective of whether or not they are a member of the trade union; furthermore, even those not belonging to the trade union must pay a contribution to the trade union to benefit from the agreement. The Ministry of Labour and Social Security's task was to conduct a census and determine the number of workers duly belonging to each trade union organization, without making any pronouncement on the subsequent right to bargain collectively. The Government states that the figures in the census reflect the number of members as at 30 November 1995 and that, to date, it is not able to account for any further changes in membership or withdrawal of membership in either of the trade unions.

B. B. The Committee's conclusions

B. B. The Committee's conclusions
  • The Committee's conclusions
    1. 273 The Committee notes the report of the representative of the Director-General, Professor Santiago Pérez del Castillo, of the mission carried out in Colombia from 7 to 11 October 1996, and wishes to thank him for the work he has accomplished. The Committee also thanks the Government, the authorities and the social partners for their full cooperation with the representative of the Director-General throughout the mission. Furthermore, the Committee takes note of the written information provided by the Government on the various cases and the various Bills submitted to Congress to bring the legislation in line with Conventions Nos. 87 and 98 and to ratify Conventions Nos. 151 and 144 which has been submitted to the Committee of Experts on the Application of Conventions and Recommendations.
    2. 274 First, before analysing the allegations and observations communicated by the Government in connection with each case in particular, the Committee feels bound to express its grave concern at the allegations which refer to a great extent to violent murder, disappearances and other acts of violence against trade union officials and members, as well as raids on trade union headquarters and trade union members' homes. The Committee recalls that it has for many years been examining cases on serious acts of violence against trade union officials and members in Colombia. It deeply regrets to note that the violence does not seem to have diminished but that, on the contrary, it seems to have been growing during the past few years, which once again has affected trade unionists.
    3. 275 The Committee notes from the mission report that, against the complex and serious climate of violence prevailing in Colombia, there are a series of causes for concern recognized by the majority of those interviewed by the representative of the Director-General: (i) the violence is endemic to all sectors of society (the figures given in connection with murders committed in 1995 vary between 25,000 and 30,000), but the trade union movement has been subject to serious attacks. This is a situation that has been dragging on for 45 years in Colombia and is compounded by the fact that the presence of the State authority is widely dispersed in some regions of the country; (ii) this violence may be attributed to the guerrilla movement, drug traffickers, paramilitary groups - some of which act with the acquiescence and active participation of the state security forces - and common criminals; (iii) a very large number of cases of acts of violence remain unsolved, which gives an added incentive to repeat them and to commit further violations of human rights (few are judged, proceedings are slow, general prosecutors cannot or dare not carry out investigations because their lives are endangered), and (iv) it is almost impossible to provide protection to trade union officials and members threatened. The Committee stresses the total ineffectiveness of the judicial system and the intervention of a separate military jurisdiction concurrently with the civil system.
    4. 276 The Committee notes that according to the mission report, the Government states that it has taken a number of positive measures to put an end to impunity. In particular, the Committee notes with interest the following measures adopted: (i) the establishment of the victim and witness protection programme of the Office of the General Prosecutor; (ii) the setting up of a National Human Rights Unit whose competence extends to, amongst other things, murders of trade union officials who have been presumably killed on account of their trade union activities; (iii) the planning within the Ministry of the Interior of a special administrative unit of human rights which will have a special section for the protection of persons who have received threats; and (iv) the setting up of a ministerial committee to examine cases on violations of human rights to verify the allegations which, in the event of finding the allegations are well-founded and of the responsibility on the State to order the payment of compensation. Taking note of these measures, the Committee stresses that the mission report reveals that the number of victims of violence is extraordinarily high and that the failure of judicial proceedings to shed light on the facts gives rise to an extremely high degree of impunity. In addition, the Committee profoundly deplores the fact that not one of the numerous allegations before it has resulted in the guilty party being punished. Finally, the Committee notes with interest the climate of social dialogue which the Government is trying to create, emphasizing the importance of a system of ethics and a new culture which, while it does not ignore differences or conflict, gives priority to dialogue and understanding.
    5. 277 Finally, the Committee notes with extreme concern that the mission report draws attention to the present increase in the number of paramilitary or self-defense groups in many sectors of the country, whose acts of violence are added to those of drug traffickers, the guerrilla movement, common criminals and, institutionalized by members of the security forces. Similarly the Committee notes that according to the report, the action of paramilitary groups primarily affects trade unionists in many regions of the country and that many of those interviewed stressed that the security forces allowed the action of such groups. Similarly, the Committee notes that those interviewed referred to the existence of cases in which state officials had committed infringements of human rights.
    6. 278 In this context and in connection with all the alleged acts of violence, the Committee reminds the Government that "freedom of association can only be exercised in conditions in which fundamental human rights, and in particular those relating to human life and personal safety, are fully respected and guaranteed"; "the killing, disappearance or serious injury of trade union leaders and trade unionists require the institution of independent judicial inquiries in order to shed full light, at the earliest date, on the facts and circumstances in which such actions occurred and in this way, to the extent possible, determine where responsibilities lie, punish the guilty parties and prevent the repetition of similar events"; and that "the absence of judgements against the guilty parties creates, in practice, a situation of impunity, which reinforces the climate of violence and insecurity, and which is extremely damaging to the exercise of trade union rights" (see Digest of decisions and principles of the Freedom of Association Committee, 4th (revised) edition, 1996, paras. 46, 51 and 55). Similarly, the Committee asks the Government to take all the necessary measures to dismantle the paramilitary groups which are preventing the normal development of trade union activities in various areas of the country.
  • Case No. 1761
    1. 279 As regards the allegations concerning the murders and injuries sustained by trade union officials or members, the Committee notes that the Government is carrying out judicial inquiries in connection with the murders of the trade union officials Rodrigo Rojas Acosta, Alberto Alvarado, Tina Soto Castellanos and Rosario Moreno, Hugo Zapata Restrepo, Guillermo Alonso Benítez Zapata and Marco Julio Martínez Quiceno; it is similarly carrying out inquiries on the serious injuries sustained by Carlos Posada during the search of the trade union headquarters of the Single Federation of Workers of Antioquía (FUTRAN). The Committee expresses the hope that the judicial inquiries under way might shed light on the facts, determine where responsibilities lie and punish the guilty parties. The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of the outcome of these inquiries. Furthermore, the Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of developments regarding the inquiries under way in connection with the murders of the trade union officials Perea Israel and Miguel Camelo Reinaldo, as well as on the development of the judicial proceedings continuing against the trade union members Mr. Luna, Mr. Chaparro and Mr. Patiño (the Government had informed the Committee at its March 1995 meeting on the beginning of these latter judicial inquiries).
    2. 280 Concerning the alleged detentions of trade union officials, the Committee notes that the Government provided the following information: Ortega García Jorge Luis has been charged with rebellion but, at the same time, judicial inquiries are being carried out to look into threats made against him; he is at present free; Tovar Arrieta Domingo Rafael is not being held and judicial inquiries are being carried out to look into charges that he was abducted and threatened; Orozco Nassan Luis Fernando is not being held and judicial inquiries are being carried out to examine whether he was a victim of extortion; and Martínez César is being charged with abduction but, at the same time, judicial inquiries are being carried out to examine whether he was a victim of extortion. The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of the judicial inquiries in which these trade union officials are involved.
    3. 281 Concerning the other alleged detentions of the trade union officials Triviño Flavio Quiceno Evelio, Escobar Héctor and Ronancio Germán on 12 February 1994 in Mesitas, the Committee notes that the Government has failed to communicate its observations. In these circumstances, the Committee requests the Government to ascertain whether these trade union officials are in fact detained and, in the event that it finds that they were arrested on grounds of their trade union activities, that they take measures to ensure their immediate release.
    4. 282 Finally, with respect to the allegations concerning: (1) the expulsion of workers from the headquarters of the Construction Workers Trade Union (SINDICONS) on 11 February 1994 in Cali; (2) the carrying out of visits by members of the state security to trade union meetings and headquarters, for example the Congress of the National Federation of Construction and Cement Workers, which was held in Bogotá between 9 and 12 February 1994; and (3) the existence of paramilitary groups in Medellín that are preventing the normal exercise of trade union activities, the Committee notes that the Government has failed to communicate its observations. In these circumstances, the Committee requests the Government to take measures to ensure that the state security forces do not enter into trade union headquarters if they do not have the necessary judicial warrant.
  • Case No. 1787
    1. 283 In connection with the many murders of and acts of violence committed against trade union officials and members, the Committee notes that the Government informed the mission that judicial inquiries were being carried out in connection with the following murders of, and death threats against, trade union officials or members: (1) Antonio Moreno (12.08.1995); (2) Manuel Ballesta (13.08.1995); (3) Francisco Mosquera Córdoba (02.1996); (4) Carlos Arroyo de Arco (02.1996); (5) Francisco Antonio Usuga (22.03.1996); (6) Pedro Luis Bermúdez Jaramillo (6.06.1995); (7) Armando Umanes Petro (23.05.1996); (8) William Gustavo Jaimes Torres (28.08.1995); (9) Ernesto Fernandez Pezter; (10) Jaime Eliacer Ojeda; (11) Alfonso Noguera; (12) Alvaro Hoyos Pabon (12.12.95); (13) Libardo Antonio Acevedo (7.7.96) and (14) Jairo Alfonso Gamboa Lopez (was threatened with murder). The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of the outcome of the judicial inquiries under way.
    2. 284 Furthermore, the Committee notes that the Government is carrying out a judicial inquiry in connection with the setting off of an explosive device in the headquarters of the Construction Workers Trade Union (SINDICONS) in Medellín. The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of the outcome of this judicial inquiry.
    3. 285 Concerning the alleged murders of members of the trade union organization SINTRAINAGRO, Oriol Chaverra, Hernán Correra, Medardo Cuestas, Manuel Márquez, Pedro Barbosa, Omar Casarubio, Fernando Pérez and Amin Palacio, the Committee notes that according to the Government, these persons are alive and they have not lodged any complaints that their lives have been threatened.
    4. 286 Furthermore, the Committee notes that the Government failed to submit observations on many murders, attempted murders, death threats, disappearances and physical attacks against trade union officials and members, as well as raids on trade union headquarters and trade union members' homes (see in Annex I the full list of allegations to which the Government has failed to reply). In these circumstances, the Committee urges the Government to communicate its observations as soon as possible on all the cases mentioned in Annex I.
    5. 287 With respect to the Committee's request that the Government should carry out an inquiry in the ALFAGRES S.A. enterprise to ascertain the veracity of the alleged anti-union dismissals, the Committee notes that according to the Government, the inspection and supervisory department of the Ministry of Labour carried out an inquiry and found "that the enterprise had not violated freedom of association". Furthermore, the Committee notes that the Government states that a number of trade unionists withdrew the complaint they had lodged with the administrative authorities and that other founder members of the trade union who negotiated their termination with the enterprise, subsequently initiated judicial proceedings to be reinstated. The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of the outcome of the judicial proceedings under way.
    6. 288 With regard to the allegations pending concerning the suppression of the posts of trade union members and officials at the Ministry of Finance, the promotion of an anti-union campaign by the authorities in this Ministry intimidating workers wishing to belong to the trade union and the dismissal of members of the Executive Committee, the Committee notes that according to the Government: (1) the jobs of trade union members and officials had not been cut with a view to destroying the trade union, but had been the result of restructuring within the Ministry affecting many workers; (2) there is no denying that an official of the Ministry did stir up an anti-union campaign but that this situation has been corrected; and (3) the three members of the union Executive Committee dismissed as a result of the restructuring have initiated judicial proceedings.
    7. 289 In this respect, concerning the restructuring by the Ministry of Finance which resulted in the dismissal of many workers, the Committee reminds the Government that it is important that "governments consult with trade union organizations to discuss the consequences of restructuring programmes on the employment and working conditions of employees" (see Digest, op. cit., para. 937). Furthermore, as regards the campaign of anti-union intimidation - moreover acknowledged by the Government which states that it has however been corrected - the Committee points out to the Government that "no person should be dismissed or prejudiced in his or her employment by reason of trade union membership or legitimate trade union activities, and it is important to forbid and penalize in practice all acts of anti-union discrimination in respect of employment" (see Digest, op. cit., para. 696). Finally, the Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of the outcome of the judicial proceedings under way in connection with the dismissals of the three members of the union Executive Committee.
    8. 290 Finally, in connection with the Committee's request to the Government that it should take the necessary measures to ensure that the trade union officials and members belonging to the SINTRATEXTILIA union who had been dismissed for their lawful trade union activities should be reinstated, the Committee notes that the Government states that a penal complaint has been launched against the TEXTILIA LTD enterprise and that a number of trade unionists have lodged judicial proceedings on fuero sindical (trade union immunity) and their reinstatement. The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of the outcome of the judicial proceedings under way, both within the penal and labour courts.
  • Case No. 1896
    1. 291 The Committee notes that the allegations made in this case refer to the complainant organization's lack of agreement with a census of members carried out by the Ministry of Labour and Social Security. In particular, the complainant organization alleges that SITTELECOM has 4,471 members and that the census conceded that it had 1,779, and that as a result of this census it ceased to be the most representative organization of the National Telecommunications Enterprise of Colombia and lost the right to negotiate a new collective labour agreement, which was handed over to the ATT.
    2. 292 The Committee notes the Government's statements to the effect that: (1) the census was carried out at the request of the TELECOM enterprise at national level, with a view to establishing which of the two organizations in the enterprise - SITTELECOM and ATT - was the most representative for purposes of collective bargaining (the Labour Code provides that the representation of workers through collective bargaining is incumbent upon the trade union grouping the majority - half minus one - of the workers in the enterprise); the statutes of SITTELECOM stipulate, amongst other requirements, that anyone wishing to be a member of the trade union must submit a written request for membership to the Executive Committee which decides whether to give its approval or not; (3) when carrying out the census on the SITTELECOM organization, the administrative authorities only considered as members those workers who had complied with the above-mentioned requirement to submit a request for membership in writing; the trade union organization SITTELECOM, through its various branches, did not submit the registers of members required to carry out the census and, in cases in which they did, the administrative authorities noted that most of those registered as members by SITTELECOM had not been duly accepted as members by the Executive Committee; (4) the fact that the employer draws up a list on the basis of trade union check-offs does not provide evidence that those paying contributions are members of the trade union given that, under section 471 of the Labour Code, the collective agreement might stipulate that dues should be paid by those not belonging to the trade union as they benefit from the collective agreement; and (5) the trade union organization SITTELECOM has lodged an appeal to the judicial authorities in relation with this census.
    3. 293 In this respect, the Committee notes that, according to the Government, the administrative authorities complied strictly with the provisions contained in the statutes of the SITTELECOM trade union organization when counting the members of the trade union in question and on account of various irregularities - the failure of workers to submit in writing their request to belong to the trade union, the failure to submit the register of members and the failure of the Executive Committee to approve requests for membership - reached a number of 1,779 members to which the complainant organization objects. In these circumstances, while noting that it does not have at its disposal any factors which might lead to conclude that the Government had favoured one trade union organization over another in the TELECOM enterprise when carrying out the census in question, the Committee urges SITTELECOM to take measures to ensure that all its members comply with provisions laid down in the statutes and, in the event that they do so, requests the Government to carry out a new census counting all the workers who have been effectively registered as members of the trade union organization in question. Finally, the Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of any developments that might arise in this respect and to send it a copy of the ruling concerning the appeal lodged with the judicial authorities by the trade union organization SITTELECOM.

The Committee's recommendations

The Committee's recommendations
  1. 294. In the light of its foregoing interim conclusions, the Committee invites the Governing Body to approve the following recommendations:
    • (a) The Committee notes the report of the representative of the Director-General, Professor Santiago Pérez del Castillo, on the mission carried out in Colombia from 7 to 11 October 1996 and thanks him for the work he has accomplished. The Committee also thanks the Government, the authorities and the social partners for their full cooperation with the representative of the Director-General throughout the mission. Furthermore, the Committee notes the information provided by the Government to the mission on the various cases and notes with interest the various Bills submitted to Congress to bring the legislation in line with Conventions Nos. 87 and 98 and ratify Conventions Nos. 151 and 144.
    • (b) The Committee wishes to express its serious concern at the allegations which refer to a great extent to the violent death, disappearances and other acts of violence against trade union officials and members, as well as raids on trade union headquarters and trade union members' homes. The Committee stresses that it has for many years been examining cases on serious acts of violence against trade union officials and members in Colombia and deeply regrets to note that the violence against trade unionists does not appear to have diminished but that on the contrary, it seems to have been growing during the past few years. Although the Committee notes that the Government has taken a series of measures to combat the violence and put an end to the impunity, the mission report reveals that the number of victims of the violence is extremely high and that the judicial proceedings to cast light on the events are characterized by an extremely high level of impunity.
    • (c) Noting with extreme concern the present increase in the number of paramilitary or self-defence groups in many sectors of the country, whose acts of violence primarily affect trade unionists in many regions of the country, the Committee requests the Government to take the necessary measures to dismantle the paramilitary groups which prevent the normal development of trade union activities in various areas of the country.
      • Case No. 1761
    • (d) Whilst expressing the hope that the judicial inquiries under way will allow as soon as possible to shed light on the facts, determine where responsibilities lie and punish those guilty of murdering the trade union officials Rodrigo Rojas Acosta, Alberto Alvarado, Tina Soto Castellanos and Rosario Moreno, Hugo Zapata Restrepo, Guillermo Alonso Benítez Zapata and Marco Julio Martínez Quiceno; as well as the judicial inquiries into the serious injuries sustained by Carlos Posada during the search of the headquarters of the Single Federation of Workers of Antioquía (FUTRAN), the Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of the outcome of the judicial proceedings under way. Furthermore, the Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of developments regarding the inquiries under way in connection with the murders of the trade union officials Perea Israel and Miguel Camelo Reinaldo, as well as of developments concerning the judicial proceedings continuing against the trade unionists Mr. Luna, Mr. Chaparro and Mr. Patiño.
    • (e) The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of the judicial proceedings involving the following trade union officials: Ortega García Jorge Luis, charged with rebellion, although judicial inquiries are being carried out to look into threats made against him; Tovar Arrieta Domingo Rafael, in whose case judicial inquiries are being carried out to look into charges that he was abducted and threatened; Orozco Nassan Luis Fernando, in the case of whom judicial inquiries are under way to look into the charge that he was a victim of extortion; and Martínez César, who is charged with abduction, but in whose case judicial inquiries are being carried out to determine whether he was a victim to extortion. Furthermore, concerning the alleged detentions of the trade union officials Triviño Flavio, Quiceno Evelio, Escobas Héctor and Ronancio Germán on 12 February 1994 in Mesitas, the Committee requests the Government to ascertain whether these trade union officials are in fact detained, and in the event that it finds that these officials were arrested on grounds of their trade union activities, to take measures to ensure their immediate release.
    • (f) With respect to the allegations concerning: (1) the expulsion of workers from the headquarters of the Construction Workers Trade Union (SINDICONS), on 11 February 1994 in Cali; (2) the carrying out of visits by members of the state security to trade union meetings and headquarters, for example the Congress of the National Federation of Construction and Cement Workers, which was held in Bogota between 9 and 12 February 1994; and (3) the existence of paramilitary groups in Medellín that are preventing the normal exercise of trade union activities, the Committee requests the Government to take measures to ensure that the State security forces do not enter trade union headquarters if they do not have the necessary corresponding judicial warrant.
      • Case No. 1787
    • (g) The Committee requests the Government to inform it of the outcome of the judicial inquiries initiated in connection with the following murders of and death threats against trade union officials or members: (1) Antonio Moreno (12.08.1995); (2) Manuel Ballest (13.08.1995); (3) Francisco Mosquera Córdoba (02.1996); (4) Carlos Arroyo de Arco (02.1996); (5) Francisco Antonio Usuga (22.03.1996); (6) Pedro Luis Bermúdez Jaramillo (6.06.1995); (7) Armando Umanes Petro (23.05.1996); (8) William Gustavo Jaimes Torres (28.08.1995); (9) Ernesto Fernandez Pezter; (10) Jaime Eliacer Ojeda; (11) Alfonso Noguera; (12) Alvaro Hoyos Pabon (12.12.95); (13) Libardo Antonio Acevedo (7.7.96) and (14) Jairo Alfonso Gamboa Lopez (was threatened with murder). Furthermore, the Committee requests the Government to inform it on the outcome of the judicial enquiries in connection with the setting off of an explosive device in the headquarters of the Construction Workers Trade Union (SINDICONS) in Medellín. Finally, noting that the Government has failed to communicate its observations on a considerable number of murders, murder attempts, death threats, disappearances and physical attacks on trade union leaders and officials, as well as searches of trade union headquarters and trade union member's homes (see Annex I), the Committee urges the Government to communicate its observations as soon as possible on all the cases mentioned in Annex I.
    • (h) Concerning the alleged anti-union dismissals in the ALFAGRES S.A. enterprise, the Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of the outcome of the judicial proceedings under way.
    • (i) Concerning the allegations of dismissals of trade union officials in the Ministry of Finance, the Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of the outcome of the legal proceedings under way concerning the dismissals of the three members of the union Executive Committee.
    • (j) Finally, in connection with the dismissals of trade union officials and members belonging to the SINTRATEXTILIA trade union, the Committee requests the Government to keep it informed on the outcome of the judicial proceedings under way, both within the penal and labour courts.
      • Case No. 1896
    • (k) The Committee urges the trade union organization SITTELECOM to take measures to ensure that the members of this trade union comply with the provisions contained in the statutes and, in the event that they do so, requests the Government to carry out a new census counting all the workers who have been effectively registered as members of the trade union in question. Finally, the Committee requests the Government to inform it of any developments that may arise in this respect and to send it a copy of the ruling concerning the appeal lodged with the judicial authorities by the trade union organization SITTELECOM.

Annex I

Annex I
  1. Allegations on which the Government has not yet communicated its observations
  2. in connection with Case No. 1787
  3. Murders:
  4. (1) Hernando Cuadros (President of the Tibú branch of the Workers Trade Union
  5. - USO);
  6. (2) Manuel Francisco Giraldo, member of the Executive Committee of the
  7. National Trade Union of Workers in the Agricultural Industry (SINTRAINAGRO) on
  8. 22 March 1955;
  9. (3) Artur Moreno, member of the Workers Committee of the Doña Francia
  10. plantation, municipality of Apartadó on 7 June 1955;
  11. (4) 23 workers who were members of the National Trade Union of Workers in the
  12. Agricultural industry (SINTRAINTRAGO) on 29 August 1995;
  13. (5) 24 workers from the Rancho Ameila banana farm who were members of the
  14. National Trade Union of Workers in the Agricultural Industry on 20 September
  15. 1995;
  16. (6) José Silvio Gómez (coordinator of SINTRAINAGRO activities in Banafinca),
  17. on 22 March 1996;
  18. (7) Alvaro David (member of the Workers Committee of the Los Planes estate,
  19. member of SINTRAINAGRO), on 22 March 1996.
  20. Attempted murders:
  21. The trade unionists Edgar Riaño, Darío Lotero, Luis Hernández and Monerge
  22. Sánchez.
  23. Death threats:
  24. (1) Bertina Calderón (Vice-President of the CUT);
  25. (2) Daniel Rico (President of the Federation of Petroleum Workers -
  26. FEDEPETROL);
  27. (3) Víctor Ramírez (President of the Transport Workers Union - SINTRASON);
  28. (4) Members of the Executive Committee of the Single Agricultural Trade Union
  29. Federation - (FENSUAGRO);
  30. (5) Francisco Ramírez Cuéllar (President of the Workers' Trade Union of the
  31. Mineralco S.A. enterprise);
  32. (6) Pedro Barón, President of the Tolima Branch of the Single Confederation of
  33. Workers of Colombia (CUT), by members of the armed forces following his
  34. participation in a protest strike on 19 July 1995;
  35. (7) The members of the Executive Committee of the Union of Workers of the
  36. Titán S.A. enterprise, in the municipality of Yumbo, who received death
  37. threats from a paramilitary group called "Colombia without guerrillas"
  38. (COLSINGUE), on 26 October 1995 and 17 May 1996.
  39. Detention and raids on homes:
  40. Luis David Rodríguez Pérez (former leader of the National Trade Union of
  41. Workers of Incora - SINTRADIN).
  42. Raids on union headquarters, telephone tapping, surveillance of trade union
  43. members:
  44. A raid on the headquarters of the Single Agricultural Trade Union Federation
  45. (FENSUAGRO), the tapping of telephones in the union headquarters and of
  46. members' telephones and surveillance of the President of the Federation, Luis
  47. Carlos Acero by armed persons.
  48. Disappearances:
  49. (1) Rodrigo Rodríguez Sierra, President of the Trade Union of Oil-producing
  50. Workers (SINTRAPROACEITES), Copey branch, on 16 February 1995;
  51. (2) Jairo Navarro, trade union member, on 6 June 1995.
  52. Physical aggression and police repression:
  53. (1) Police repression against workers from the Empresas Públicas de Cartagena
  54. during a peaceful demonstration on 29 June 1995;
  55. (2) police repression against workers from the Empresas de Acueductos y
  56. Teléfonos and organized peasants from Tolima who were holding a protest
  57. meeting on 14 August 1995. The repression resulted in the death of Fernando
  58. Lombana who was a member of the Association of Farmers of Small and
  59. Medium-sized Holdings in Tolima (ASOPEMA), the serious injury of three other
  60. persons and several arrests (trade union members belonging to the
  61. organizations that took part in the protest).
  62. Annex II
  63. Report of the mission to Colombia carried out from 7 to 11 October 1996 by
  64. Professor Santiago Pérez del Castillo
  65. (Parts relating to cases pending before the Committee)
  66. Contents I. Introduction
  67. II. Overview of labour relations in Colombia
  68. 1. The actors
  69. 2. Violence in general
  70. 3. Anti-union violence
  71. III. Issues raised by the Committee of Experts
  72. (not reproduced)
  73. 1. Provisions of Colombian legislation to which
  74. the Committee of Experts objects
  75. 2. Position of the government authorities
  76. and the social partners
  77. 3. Impact of the mission on legislation
  78. IV. Draft legislation for the ratification of additional
  79. Conventions on freedom of association (not reproduced)
  80. V. Cases pending before the Committee on Freedom
  81. of Association
  82. 1. Cases pending
  83. 2. Aspects of the problem of violence
  84. 3. Information obtained
  85. VI. Reflections and concluding remarks
  86. Appendices: (Appendices II, III and IV not reproduced)
  87. I. List of persons interviewed
  88. II. Legislative provisions to which the Committee
  89. of Experts objects
  90. III. Texts of draft legislation
  91. IV. Observations on the cases pending before the
  92. Committee on Freedom of Association submitted
  93. to the Mission
  94. I. Introduction
  95. At its December 1995 meeting, the Committee of Experts on the Application of
  96. Conventions and Recommendations formulated an observation on the application
  97. of the Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98),
  98. by Colombia and requested the Government to take steps to bring its
  99. legislation into conformity with the Convention.
  100. During the discussion of this case in the Conference Committee on the
  101. Application of Standards in June 1996, the Minister of Labour and Social
  102. Security, Mr. Orlando Obregón Sabogal, invited the ILO to carry out a mission
  103. to his country in order to promote union rights and social dialogue. In this
  104. respect, the Committee formulated the following conclusion:
  105. The Committee noted the written and oral information provided by the (Minister
  106. of Labour and Social Security) and the discussion which followed. The
  107. Committee recalled that the Committee of Experts insisted that the Government
  108. should take measures to remove the prohibition placed on public employees who
  109. were not employees engaged in the administration of the State to conclude
  110. collective bargaining agreements. The Committee observed with concern that
  111. many complaints of a serious nature were still outstanding and before the
  112. Committee on Freedom of Association. The Committee also noted that a draft law
  113. which was the result of a tripartite agreement would be presented to the next
  114. legislative session. It noted that the Government had invited an ILO mission
  115. in order to promote social dialogue and trade union rights. The Committee
  116. expressed the hope that, in this context, the next report from the Government
  117. would note substantial progress, in law and in practice, with regard to the
  118. application of the Convention.
  119. Moreover, the Government decided to extend the mission's mandate to: (1) the
  120. issues raised by the Committee of Experts on the Application of Conventions
  121. and Recommendations in the context of its examination of the application of
  122. Convention No. 87 by Colombia; and (2) the complaints presented by various
  123. trade union organizations to the Committee on Freedom of Association of the
  124. Governing Body. The mission's mandate thus covered both the issues raised by
  125. the Committee of Experts with respect to the Freedom of Association and
  126. Protection of the Right to Organize Convention, 1948 (No.87), and the Right to
  127. Organize and Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98), and the cases
  128. pending before the Committee on Freedom of Association (Cases Nos. 1761, 1787
  129. and 1896).
  130. The Director-General of the ILO appointed me as his representative to
  131. undertake this mission, which was carried out from 7 to 11 October 1996. I was
  132. accompanied on the mission by Mr. Horacio Guido, an official of the Freedom of
  133. Association Branch of the International Labour Standards Department, and Mr.
  134. Luis Zamudio, International Labour Standards Specialist with the
  135. Multidisciplinary Team based in Lima, Peru.
  136. During the mission we met with His Excellency Mr. Orlando Obregón Sabogal,
  137. Minister of Labour and Social Security, and senior officials of the Ministry;
  138. Mr. Alfonso Valdivieso, General Prosecutor; Ms. Graciela Uribe de Lozano,
  139. Director-General for Special Affairs of the Ministry of Foreign Relations; Mr.
  140. Luis Eduardo Montoya Medina, the Attorney General; Mr. Carlos Gaviria Díaz,
  141. President of the Constitutional Court; the members of the Labour Court of
  142. Cassation of the Supreme Court; Mr. José Fernando Castro, the Ombudsman; the
  143. National Human Rights Unit; Mr. Edgar González Salas, Head of the
  144. Administrative Department for the Public Service; Mr. Carlos Medellín Becerra,
  145. Minister of Justice and Law; the Standing Committee on Concertation of Wage
  146. and Labour Policies; Mr. Carlos del Castillo, Resident Representative of the
  147. United Nations Development Programme (UNDP); and representatives of the Single
  148. Confederation of Workers of Colombia (CUT); the General Confederation of
  149. Democratic Workers (CGTD); the Confederation of Workers of Colombia (CTC); the
  150. National Federation of State Workers (FENALTRASE); the United National
  151. Federation of Salaried Employees and Professionals of the State and Public
  152. Service (FUTEC); the Single Agricultural Trade Union Federation (FENSUAGRO);
  153. the National Association of Manufacturers (ANDI); the National Federation of
  154. Merchants (FENALCO); and the Colombian Association of Small and Medium-sized
  155. Enterprises (ACOPI). A list of all the persons interviewed is appended to this
  156. report (Appendix I).
  157. In all the interviews, the mission placed special emphasis on explaining the
  158. reason for its presence and its objectives, which were to explain and clarify
  159. the observations of the Committee of Experts and explore possible solutions to
  160. the problems that had arisen, as well as to collect as much information as
  161. possible concerning the cases pending before the Committee on Freedom of
  162. Association.
  163. I should like to emphasize that the authorities provided us with every
  164. assistance in carrying out the mission, as well as a high degree of
  165. cooperation, for which I am most grateful. I would also like to express my
  166. appreciation to all the persons interviewed for the information they supplied.
  167. II. Overview of labour relations in Colombia
  168. 1. The actors
  169. Since his appointment in January 1996, the Minister of Labour, Mr. Orlando
  170. Obregón Sabogal, a prominent former trade union leader, has won a high degree
  171. of respect and credibility among the representatives of the various
  172. occupational organizations contacted by the mission, who, generally speaking,
  173. highlighted his serene personality, which was conducive to dialogue and
  174. understanding.
  175. The policy pursued is characterized by efforts to bring the social partners
  176. closer together, giving priority to formal social concertation, which, the
  177. mission found, is considered in the context of the Colombian labour relations
  178. system as a most appropriate instrument for the achievement of mutual
  179. understanding between employers and organized workers.
  180. According to the 1991 Constitution, which was the outcome of efforts to bring
  181. peace to the country by establishing a new political pact, "a permanent
  182. commission composed of the Government, the representatives of employers and of
  183. workers, will promote sound labour relations, contribute to the settlement of
  184. collective labour disputes, and coordinate wage and labour policies. The law
  185. will regulate its membership and functioning" (article 56, third paragraph).
  186. (Endnote 1)
  187. The current administration approved an Act elaborating on this provision,
  188. which itself drew its inspiration from one of the main advisors of the present
  189. Minister of Labour.
  190. The Act on the concertation of wage and labour policies, which elaborates on
  191. this constitutional mandate, was approved this year (No. 278 of 1996). The
  192. same policy orientation is seen in the project entitled "A new culture of
  193. labour relations" (Endnote 2). The above-mentioned Act is considered to be one
  194. of the main results of this project, as is the tripartite agreement reached on
  195. the Act respecting collective bargaining for the public sector. Also worth
  196. mentioning is the television programme entitled "Chóquelas", promoted by the
  197. authorities: it emphasizes the importance of a system of ethics and a new
  198. culture which, while it does not ignore differences or conflict, gives
  199. priority to dialogue and understanding. In the conditions prevailing in
  200. Colombia today, these values are essential for the development of a culture
  201. for peace.
  202. Among the state authorities, special mention should be made of the Office of
  203. the General Prosecutor. The mission met twice with the General Prosecutor, Dr.
  204. Alfonso Valdivieso, who described the efforts being made to combat the
  205. impunity of crimes aggravating the serious situation of violence prevailing in
  206. the country, and especially those affecting fundamental human rights. He
  207. considered that the mission's visit was especially timely and appropriate and
  208. expressed his willingness to collaborate fully in achieving its objectives.
  209. Within the Office of the General Prosecutor, the Investigations Department,
  210. comprising some 4,000 officials, carries out the functions of the judicial
  211. police.
  212. Another body with responsibility for investigating crimes and for police
  213. functions in general is the Security Administrative Department (DAS), which
  214. reports directly to the President of the Republic.
  215. The office of the Ombudsman, which is part of the Public Ministry, is a
  216. supervisory body mandated by article 118 of the Constitution to carry out "the
  217. safeguarding and promotion of human rights, protection of the public interest
  218. and monitoring of the official conduct of persons in public office". Under the
  219. Constitution and the legislation, the supervisory role of the Ombudsman with
  220. regard to the promotion and exercise of human rights is confined to the acts
  221. and omissions of a specific group of Colombians: public servants. (Endnote 3)
  222. As regards workers' organizations, it should be pointed out that out of a
  223. total of 11 million workers, some 7 per cent are unionized, according to
  224. information provided by one of the three main organizations; another
  225. organization placed the figure at around 10 per cent.
  226. The confederation with the largest membership and that which has been hit
  227. hardest by acts of violence is the Single Confederation of Workers (CUT). It
  228. groups together 53 per cent of state employees (SINALTRASE), a large
  229. proportion of whom are members of the teachers' organization. A considerable
  230. share of the CUT's membership is affiliated to the International Confederation
  231. of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU).
  232. During the mission there were press reports of the forthcoming elections of
  233. this confederation, for which 21 lists of candidates were presented. Press
  234. reports estimated the number of members entitled to vote to be as high as
  235. 287,000. (Endnote 4) In their interview with the mission, the officers of the
  236. confederation placed the number of members at approximately 400,000.
  237. Another important trade union confederation is the General Confederation of
  238. Democratic Workers (CGTD), which is affiliated to the World Confederation of
  239. Labour (WCL). It was the result of a merger between the Confederation of
  240. Democratic Workers, founded in 1988, and the CGT. This confederation did not
  241. sign the Social Pact of 1995 and maintains that it is openly opposed to the
  242. neo-liberal model of Presidents Gaviria and Samper. However, it does
  243. participate in the social concertation under article 56 of the Constitution.
  244. It is considered to be the main confederation of the private sector, with
  245. 380,000 members.
  246. In addition to these two confederations, there is a third, the Confederation
  247. of Workers of Colombia (CTC), which is affiliated to the ICFTU.
  248. Employers' organizations include the National Association of Manufacturers
  249. (ANDI), affiliated to the International Organization of Employers (IOE), which
  250. is the most representative organization, and the National Federation of
  251. Merchants (FENALCO). Both are members of the Social Concertation Commission.
  252. Small and medium-sized enterprises are represented by the Colombian
  253. Association of Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (ACOPI).
  254. The FENALCO is a nationwide organization whose members range from small
  255. village shopkeepers to large supermarket chains. According to representatives
  256. of the organization, there is hardly any unionization among the workers
  257. employed by the enterprises affiliated to it, either because of their small
  258. size or because of the prevalent labour relations style.
  259. 2. Violence in general
  260. One of the mission's objectives was to collect information on the various
  261. cases pending before the Committee on Freedom of Association dealing with
  262. extremely serious violations of human rights, such as murders, massacres,
  263. torture, forced disappearances, etc. These examples are neither recent
  264. manifestations nor isolated occurrences, as was confirmed by the mission, and
  265. can be seen from a brief glance at this supervisory body's jurisprudence.
  266. The mission endeavoured to understand the reasons for the violence and inform
  267. itself about some of its manifestations. A large part of the country is
  268. sparsely populated. Fifty per cent of the country, the eastern region, only
  269. has one million inhabitants compared to the 35 million living in the rest of
  270. the country.
  271. The prevailing climate of violence in this vast territory has been dragging on
  272. for 45 years and is aggravated by the fact, that according to a senior
  273. government official, the presence of state authority is widely dispersed in
  274. some regions of the country. Among the acts of violence - sometimes marked by
  275. unusual cruelty - are a very large number of unsolved cases and, although
  276. efforts are being made to combat this situation, understandably the fact that
  277. these crimes go unpunished is an additional incentive to repeat them and to
  278. commit further violations of human rights. Efforts have been made to
  279. strengthen machinery for the investigation and sentencing of crimes, but they
  280. do not appear to have borne fruit and, according to some authorities, it does
  281. not seem likely that the climate of violence will improve in the near future.
  282. A report published in 1996 by the Office of the Ombudsman, (Endnote 5) quotes
  283. the Colombian Commission of Jurists as saying that the country "has for over
  284. five years registered the highest homicide rate in the world: between 1988 and
  285. 1995 the number of homicides averaged 76 per 100,000 inhabitants". The
  286. situation is particularly appalling in the Urabá region, where the rate has
  287. reached 256 homicides per 100,000 persons. Some towns in the area have
  288. registered the following chilling figures: as many as 578 homicides in Carepa,
  289. 487 in Chigorodó, 385 in Apartadó and 354 in Turbo. Few cities in the world
  290. have achieved this shameful record.
  291. The former Ombudsman, Mr. Jaime Córdoba Triviño, goes on to say that all of
  292. these alarming figures show that despite the new Constitution that entered
  293. into force in 1991, there is not yet a genuine commitment to the fundamental
  294. principles enshrined in it in Colombia. These figures also show that the State
  295. has failed, either by commission or by omission, to comply with international
  296. treaties on human rights. Colombia continues to be one of the most violent
  297. democracies in the world, with the most serious situation on the continent in
  298. terms of human rights and humanitarian law.
  299. "No-one can honestly affirm that in Colombia the State is completely
  300. uninvolved in violence. There are still people in the armed forces and police
  301. who commit illegal and arbitrary acts in the course of their military and
  302. police activities. Today thousands of Colombians are still terrorized by
  303. paramilitary groups who enjoy complete freedom of action in areas under
  304. military control. People are still murdered, tortured and abducted in the
  305. context of repression and armed conflict."
  306. "Many of the acts violating or threatening human rights committed in 1995 by
  307. Colombian agents of the State also constituted violations of international
  308. humanitarian law." The Ombudsman refers to acts and omissions by which those
  309. directly involved in hostilities - the combatants - fail to carry out their
  310. duties or violate the prohibitions imposed under article 3 of both the Geneva
  311. Conventions and additional Protocol II. "The author of an infringement of
  312. international humanitarian law may be any person fighting on either side of an
  313. armed conflict. In today's international jurisprudence and doctrine, serious
  314. violations of humanitarian law are termed war crimes."
  315. "Moreover, serious violations of international humanitarian law continued to
  316. be committed in 1995 by members of guerrilla units. In particular, these
  317. included abductions, hostage taking, murders of persons accused of
  318. collaborating with the authorities and irresponsible use of the landmines
  319. known as quiebrapatas' (leg breakers) which affect the civilian population.
  320. The Ombudsman also made a statement in September 1995 against these criminal
  321. acts committed by guerrilla units."
  322. A study commissioned by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) states
  323. that "the intensity and particular mix' of violence has varied from one region
  324. to another or from one period to another. In the last century, it was
  325. committed by rebel leaders and poorly armed farm labourers fighting in Cauca,
  326. Santander and along the Magdalena river. Partially confined to the high
  327. plateau in the thirties, violence descended into the lowlands in what was to
  328. become the guerrilla warfare-cum-criminal banditism rampant in the
  329. coffee-growing region. The FARC originally emerged as peasant self-defense
  330. units' in southern Tolima and spread throughout virtually all the colonized
  331. areas; the ELN spread from Santander to the oil-producing regions, the EPL
  332. settled in the lower coastal lands, the Quintín Lame took over the Cauca, the
  333. M19 positioned itself in the valley of the Cauca in an attempt at urban
  334. guerrilla warfare; the same went for a whole series of commando units and
  335. dissident groups that sprang up in the eighties. The paramilitary movement
  336. began in the areas of the large agricultural estates and spread like a cancer
  337. as quickly as land was turned over from cultivation to drugs in a sort of
  338. agrarian reform', in the middle reaches of the Magdalena river, the foothills
  339. or the coastal plains. Medellín suffered from Escobar's drug wars, Cali was
  340. beset by raids' and social cleansing' squads, Bogotá is legendary for its high
  341. levels of street delinquency and organized crime, Boyacá has succumbed to
  342. green fever' several times, César boasts of high abduction figures, while
  343. Urabá is being bled white in a multilateral conflict."
  344. "Violence that is this persistent in time and this widespread over space must
  345. have deep and extensive roots in the society in which it prevails. But
  346. violence that is this prone to fluctuate and change over time and from one
  347. geographical area to another must also be affected by factors that vary over
  348. time and space. There is a single violence in Colombia just as there are many
  349. forms of violence. The factors or causes' of violence are also therefore both
  350. one and many, just as the solutions that will be needed to eliminate it are
  351. both one and many."
  352. This text provides a perfect summary of what we have heard about the origins
  353. of violence from our various interlocutors: various attempts at classification
  354. have been made, but what distinguishes it most of all from that in other
  355. countries is the prevalence of private organized groupings, often without any
  356. underlying ideological motives or even any other motives whatsoever apart from
  357. that of acquiring money through crime. Paramilitary units are not necessarily
  358. linked to state security forces, and what we have repeatedly heard during
  359. interviews is that there are a variety of armed gangs pursuing a variety of
  360. objectives. (Endnote 6)
  361. A representative of an employers' organization stated that violence is
  362. everywhere and it is often difficult to tell where it comes from. He added
  363. that a good share of conflicts in Colombia are dealt with through violence.
  364. The justice system is powerless. Despite efforts made by the Government, it
  365. moves so slowly that people are not willing to wait and are losing their
  366. tolerance.
  367. According to the same employers' representative, the violence of the
  368. liberal-conservative movement of the fifties gave way to a Marxist-inspired
  369. wave of violence in the sixties, which in recent years has been replaced in
  370. some cases by that committed by subversive movements involved in the drug
  371. trade, which comes into conflict with paramilitary groups, some of which are
  372. also linked to drug trafficking. In this context, employers who head large
  373. enterprises invest considerable resources in maintaining a high level of
  374. protection through security, intelligence and surveillance.
  375. During the mission's visit, a prominent leader among agricultural employers
  376. (Endnote 7) denounced the fact that guerrillas and drug traffickers rule rural
  377. Colombia, ganging up together and using terror to dominate a large part of the
  378. country. He affirmed that the production of drugs alone brings in an annual
  379. profit of 7 million dollars, more than their income from abductions, robbery
  380. and cattle rustling. He added that in 1996, 491 cattle breeders were abducted
  381. and 47 farmers who were leaders of occupational associations or cooperatives
  382. were murdered. According to the same source, in the first nine months of the
  383. year, abductors collected over 242 million dollars only through their
  384. operations targeting rural employers. He stated that 35,000 farmers paid some
  385. 2.5 million dollars a year in extortion to rural gangs (known as
  386. vaccinations') and in sums paid by landowners to employees to check on their
  387. property every 30 days.
  388. 3. Anti-union violence
  389. As stated above, it is easy to see that violence has various origins and
  390. various targets. The list of aggressive attacks against the trade union
  391. movement is almost endless and new names are being constantly added. Some
  392. maintain that these acts are part of a premeditated plan to eradicate the
  393. trade union movement. Whatever the case, in accordance with our mission's
  394. mandate, it should be emphasized that an impressive amount of violence is
  395. targeted against persons holding trade union office or whose physical
  396. integrity and personal freedom are attacked solely on account of their trade
  397. union activity.
  398. Moreover, in this case the problem is compounded by the fact that it is not
  399. always clear whether the victim's trade union office or activity as such was
  400. the motive for the crime. Cases of guerrilla supporters or violence for
  401. private motives were mentioned to the mission. Be that as it may, the
  402. situation amounts to a formidable obstacle to the normal exercise of trade
  403. union activity and creates a powerful deterrent added to that of
  404. discrimination which, as the mission found, this type of activity tends to
  405. attract.
  406. A further example is the murder on 10 October 1996, during the mission's
  407. visit, in Barrancabermeja of a militant trade union leader of the USO in the
  408. petroleum industry. The workers employed in the Ecopetrol state enterprise
  409. held a 36-hour work stoppage in protest. (Endnote 8)
  410. The mission suggested to the Office of the General Prosecutor that it assign
  411. its Special Human Rights Unit the task of investigating the murder. To prevent
  412. this type of crime from going unpunished will contribute to curbing anti-union
  413. violence.
  414. Protection of the specific principles of the normal exercise of trade union
  415. activity and promotion of participation in occupational organizations would be
  416. tangibly improved if public opinion were made aware that the Office of the
  417. General Prosecutor was taking special action on attempted murders or murders
  418. committed against trade unionists. (Endnote 9) Until now anti-union violence
  419. does not appear to have been given special attention in the context of the
  420. general struggle against violence in general.
  421. The ILO mission found a considerable presence of other agencies of the United
  422. Nations system and other international bodies in the joint efforts to combat
  423. the serious problem of violence in Colombia. In this context, and with a view
  424. to making an appropriate contribution that is consistent with the ILO's
  425. international mandate, emphasis was laid on the question as it related to
  426. labour relations and the international labour standards on freedom of
  427. association, with the Office working alongside the other specialized agencies.
  428. III. Issues raised by the Committee of Experts
  429. (not reproduced)
  430. ...
  431. IV. Draft legislation for the ratification of additional Conventions on
  432. freedom of association
  433. (not reproduced)
  434. ...
  435. V. Cases pending before the Committee on Freedom of Association
  436. 1. Cases pending
  437. (for an exhaustive list of the allegations pending see Appendix IV)
  438. - Case No. 1761. Complaint presented by the Latin American Central of Workers
  439. and the World Federation of Trade Unions. The allegations refer to murders,
  440. detentions and other acts of violence against trade union officers and
  441. members.
  442. - Case No. 1787. Complaint presented by the International Confederation of
  443. Free Trade Unions. The allegations refer to murders, disappearances, death
  444. threats and other acts of violence against trade union officers and members.
  445. - Case No. 1896. Complaint presented by the Latin American Central of Workers.
  446. The allegations refer to refusal to recognize the representativity of a trade
  447. union organization.
  448. 2. Aspects of the problem of violence (causes, impunity, paramilitary groups,
  449. drug trafficking, sluggishness of the justice system, protection measures in
  450. the event of death threats against trade union members)
  451. Before giving an account of the specific information received concerning the
  452. various allegations in the complaints pending before the Committee, I felt it
  453. appropriate to provide a summary of the numerous observations made by the
  454. mission's interlocutors concerning the most serious allegations, which give an
  455. idea of the background against which the complaints were presented. These
  456. observations, which include important information concerning the general
  457. situation in the country, and in particular the situation of workers' and
  458. employers' organizations in the current context of violence, entirely reflect
  459. the opinions of the persons interviewed, and I have endeavoured to relay them
  460. as accurately as possible. In addition, Ministry of Labour authorities
  461. highlighted the guerrillas' recent threat to hold an armed strike in Bogotá
  462. which would take advantage of a planned education workers' strike, with
  463. demonstrations. It should also be pointed out that while the different
  464. interlocutors gave figures on the acts of violence committed in the country
  465. over the year 1995, they do not always coincide but place the number of
  466. murders at between 25,000 and 30,000, not counting other kinds of attack.
  467. Government authorities
  468. According to the Minister of Labour and Social Security, there is an acute
  469. climate of violence. Some circles consider that it should be eliminated by
  470. force, while others seek a solution through dialogue and understanding. The
  471. guerrilla war in Colombia is one of the most virulent and persistent in the
  472. world, having lasted for over 40 years. There are groups which support the
  473. guerrilla movement ideologically, while others assist it in various ways.
  474. Paramilitary groups emerged in response to guerrilla violence; they are
  475. private organizations fighting not only against the guerrilla movement but
  476. also against those suspected of assisting it. According to the Minister, over
  477. 30,000 persons are murdered in Colombia every year. When there are allegations
  478. of detentions of trade union leaders, letters are sent to the Office of the
  479. General Prosecutor, requesting priority attention, and the Attorney General
  480. and the Ombudsman may be present in order to guarantee due process of law. If
  481. the inquiry finds that the trade union leaders are members of the guerrilla
  482. movement, this is determined by the judiciary, without interference on the
  483. part of the Ministry of Labour. The Ministry of Labour and the Ministry of
  484. Defense hold joint meetings to raise awareness of the fact that someone
  485. involved in the social struggle is not to be compared with a guerrilla
  486. fighter. The army has a human rights commission which invites trade union
  487. leaders to express their views on the violence. When the headquarters of a
  488. trade union were searched by the army in Tolima, the Ministry requested
  489. information and was informed that the search was carried out on account of
  490. subversive activities. Every effort is made to take into account the fact that
  491. a trade unionist is involved in a social struggle. There are cases of trade
  492. union leaders being detained, not for their trade union activity, but because
  493. they are suspected of being involved in illicit activities. There has not been
  494. a decrease in the unionization rate as a result of the violence. The Ministry
  495. strives for recognition of the importance of trade union officers and to raise
  496. the status of the trade union movement.
  497. According to the General Prosecutor the causes of the widespread violence in
  498. the country are the guerrilla war which has lasted for over 40 years, drug
  499. trafficking, paramilitary groups and common crime. Trade unionists with
  500. right-wing tendencies are murdered by guerrilla fighters, while left-wing ones
  501. are killed by paramilitary groups. In reply to the question whether acts of
  502. violence are committed against trade unionists because of their trade union
  503. activities or membership, he replied that violence of this kind did exist and
  504. that it was a very plausible hypothesis, since trade union associations had
  505. become politicized. In Urabá political forces are mixed up with trade union
  506. organizations. In reply to the question whether trade union officers had been
  507. detained on account of their office, he said that they had been detained not
  508. specifically for this reason, but for militant subversive activities. He
  509. stated that, for example, trade unionists of the USO had been detained for
  510. being involved in abductions and other crimes. In reply to the question
  511. whether protection could be provided for threatened trade unionists, he stated
  512. that this was almost impossible, but that there was a victim and witness
  513. protection programme. He admitted that the justice system was sluggish as a
  514. result of an excessive case-load and outdated machinery and procedures. He
  515. stated further that crime was on the increase, as well as total impunity,
  516. which encourages criminals. Lastly, the General Prosecutor stated that
  517. improved links would be established with the Ministry of Labour in order to
  518. provide more direct follow-up of all cases of murder or attacks against trade
  519. union officers and members.
  520. The mission visited the National Human Rights Unit (set up in 1996). There
  521. they met with a Regional Prosecutor (one of the "faceless" prosecutors, i.e.
  522. one who is not known to be a prosecutor), who stated that the main objective
  523. of this unit is to do away with impunity. This Prosecutor stated that his
  524. office dealt with all of the cases that are hard to handle in the field,
  525. specifically because of acts of violence committed against prosecutors. The
  526. unit's mandate covers, inter alia, cases involving agents of the State
  527. (members of the security forces), or cases of action carried out by
  528. paramilitary groups and condoned by the security forces, or those in which
  529. violent acts are committed by subversive groups. As regards violence committed
  530. against trade unionists, there has been a proliferation of violent acts, with
  531. different kinds of violence occurring in each region, with its own peculiar
  532. features. In some regions there are agents of the State (members of the
  533. security forces) who, in collaboration with landowners, pursue an policy of
  534. eliminating subversion. The competence of the "faceless" prosecutors extends
  535. to crimes linked to terrorism, large-scale drug trafficking, rebellion, or
  536. abductions. Their involvement also depends on whether the victim of the crime
  537. is a trade union officer: for example, homicides fall within the competence of
  538. sectional prosecutors, but if the evidence shows that the victim is a trade
  539. union officer and the presumed motive for his death was his trade union
  540. activity, the case is handled by the Regional Prosecutor (the "faceless"
  541. prosecutor). According to the "faceless" Prosecutor interviewed by the
  542. mission, there are two theories explaining acts of violence against trade
  543. unionists: (1) violence against trade unionists is committed on account of
  544. their union activity, by paramilitary groups, in line with a general tendency
  545. to destroy trade union organizations; and (2) acts of violence against trade
  546. unionists are isolated cases, and not part of a systematic repression. The
  547. unit is also aware of the existence of acts committed by agents of the State
  548. (members of the security forces) in violation of human rights. In a number of
  549. situations there is also a problem of conflicting areas of competence between
  550. the ordinary justice system and the military penal system.
  551. According to the authorities of the Ministry of Foreign Relations and an
  552. Advisor of the President's Office for Human Rights, it is very difficult to
  553. identify the causes of violence in Colombia and to determine its origins
  554. because it is committed by so many different authors (paramilitary groups,
  555. common criminals, drug traffickers, guerrillas). They stated that there is the
  556. will to make progress and solve human rights problems, but that there are
  557. difficulties in the way of eliminating impunity and that no solution has been
  558. found to the problem of the guerrilla war and drug trafficking. Specifically,
  559. as regards trade unionists who are victims of acts of violence, they stated
  560. that the Office receives complaints within its area of competence, but that
  561. problems arise from the lack of information given by the authors of such
  562. complaints and when more information is required any delay may result in the
  563. evidence being lost. In cases of detained trade unionists, the Office
  564. endeavours to ensure that procedural guarantees are provided. Many of those
  565. concerning whom complaints are made are accused of rebellion or of terrorist
  566. acts. They informed the mission that the Office carries out a number of
  567. measures to help solve cases in which the victims were members of the trade
  568. union movement. Specifically, they refer to the following: (1) including cases
  569. affecting unionized workers in the planned nationwide information network on
  570. human rights. The main objective of this planned communication network is to
  571. develop a nationwide information system that would provide a comprehensive
  572. overview of patterns of violence in the country, as well as trends, sectors
  573. affected, etc. They added that there was the problem of determining whether a
  574. victim was a trade unionist, as well as whether this fact was related to the
  575. crime, since in many cases the information available from the sources was
  576. minimal, which means that a lengthy process of sifting through other similar
  577. cases must be gone through in order to determine whether or not an inquiry has
  578. already been undertaken; (2) the machinery for expediting cases, which
  579. consists of two types of activity: (a) requests to the authorities carrying
  580. out the relevant inquiries to update the case, or requests to initiate
  581. inquiries in cases in which complaints have not yet been brought before the
  582. competent authority; and (b) the selection of a minimum number of cases, after
  583. concertation with the workers' confederations, to be brought before the
  584. National Human Rights Unit. The mission was also informed that on 5 July 1996,
  585. Act No. 288 was approved, which provides that compensation shall be paid for
  586. violations of human rights, as stipulated by the Inter-American Commission on
  587. Human Rights and the Human Rights Committee of the International Covenant on
  588. Civil and Political Rights. Moreover, the President's Office for Human Rights
  589. stated that, as regards threats and protection to be provided to persons who
  590. have been threatened, this is a key issue for all the groups affected by
  591. violence in the country and the need exceeded the State's capacity to meet it.
  592. Support is given to requests for urgent humanitarian action, such as enabling
  593. persons threatened with imminent danger to their physical integrity to travel
  594. to different areas of the country or abroad. Requests are also made to
  595. expedite complaints concerning threats brought before the competent bodies,
  596. and the Security Administration Department and National Police are requested
  597. to assess the degree to which the person is in danger and the possibility of
  598. offering personal security services, but the demand for protection in this
  599. country is so high that alternative methods are being envisaged to increase
  600. the availability of such services. In the case of victims and witnesses of
  601. crimes, the protection programme is the responsibility of the Office of the
  602. General Prosecutor, and one of the alternatives now being developed is the
  603. establishment within the Ministry of the Interior of a special administrative
  604. unit for human rights which will have a special section dealing with the
  605. protection of persons who have received threats. It is hoped that this section
  606. will be operational at the beginning of the coming year.
  607. The Attorney General pointed out that there are still vestiges of an era of
  608. armed repression of labour disputes. He informed the mission that the Attorney
  609. General's Office takes measures against acts of violence in which the security
  610. forces are involved, and that it is possible that the security forces are
  611. involved in action targeting trade unionists, since historically a trade
  612. unionist was seen as a subversive. He repeated that this attitude is now
  613. changing.
  614. According to the Ombudsman, the causes of violence in general are as follows:
  615. social injustice, marginality (10 million persons are living at income level
  616. 1), failure of the Government to meet its promises in terms of health care,
  617. education or employment; a guerrilla war that has lasted over 40 years, during
  618. which guerrillas have taken over whole municipalities even if they cannot win
  619. the war; drug trafficking in its various manifestations (security armies to
  620. protect drug lords; some guerrilla groups join the drug trade in order to
  621. finance themselves); the paramilitary groups, which have been meting out
  622. private justice for years; and the security forces, which sometimes exceed
  623. their authority. As regards violence against trade union officers and members,
  624. he did not believe that they were the targets of organized violence, nor that
  625. there was a state policy against trade unionists; the murders of trade
  626. unionists were isolated cases. Violence was on the increase and the guerrilla
  627. movement was gaining in strength and taking over municipalities. Common crime
  628. had also increased in the cities. In some sectors there was talk of links
  629. between the trade union movement and the guerrilla movement on the one hand,
  630. and with the military and paramilitary groups on the other. A certain amount
  631. of progress had been achieved in the trade union movement and there was some
  632. tolerance with regard to trade unions.
  633. The Minister of Justice and Law stated that major efforts were being made to
  634. disseminate information on the work being done by international organizations
  635. and the importance of respect for human rights. He added that a ministerial
  636. committee had been set up to examine earlier cases of violations of human
  637. rights in order to verify the allegations, and if the State was found guilty,
  638. it would have to pay compensation. This Committee has already met, and out of
  639. 17 cases examined, the Government had ordered the payment of compensation in
  640. 15. He also emphasized the fact that this Committee would not solve the
  641. problem of violation of human rights, but that it does imply recognition of
  642. the fact that human rights were violated in some cases by the state security
  643. forces, respect for international organizations and the emergence of a shift
  644. in behaviour and awareness. As regards violence against trade unionists and
  645. the fact that crimes go unpunished because they are not solved, the Minister
  646. stated that a large part of the problem depends on finding a solution to the
  647. conflict of competence between the civil justice system and the military
  648. system. According to the Minister, the "current tendency is that if the
  649. inquiry is carried out by the military justice system, the decision handed
  650. down is normally in favour of the military", which contributes to impunity. In
  651. this respect he stated that plans were under way to amend the Code of Penal
  652. Procedure, in order to lay down clear rules for conducting trials. He pointed
  653. out that the problem lay in determining when human rights had been violated by
  654. a member of the security forces and when they had acted on or off duty. He
  655. affirmed that his Ministry had given a considerable impetus to the struggle
  656. against impunity. He stated that as regards the crime rate, hidden crime had
  657. much to do with impunity, since there were many crimes which were not
  658. reported. He explained that there was talk of an impunity rate of 97 per cent
  659. in the years 1993-94 but that the figures given by the various institutes
  660. differ according to the methodology used. Work was currently under way on
  661. creating an information system in the justice sector. As regards acts of
  662. violence committed against trade union officers and members, he stated that
  663. following the process of reconciliation, during which some guerrilla groups
  664. had decided to give up the armed struggle, the FARC and the ELN decided to
  665. continue fighting. According to the Minister, these guerrilla groups have
  666. clear links with the drug trade. Again according to the Minister, the
  667. guerrilla group ELN has a direct influence on some trade union organizations,
  668. as does the FARC. He added that it was not a total involvement but that much
  669. depended on the area of the country. There were some areas in which there were
  670. violent clashes between the army and the ELN (for example, in Santander, where
  671. the oil refineries were located). When political action is taken by a trade
  672. union and FARC or ELN sympathizers or activists are identified, the situation
  673. becomes very difficult, since the parties to the conflict target the trade
  674. unionists because this is easiest. This situation has led to the creation of
  675. paramilitary groups or self-defence groups that are waging a dirty war that
  676. goes beyond the traditional army-guerrilla conflict. There have been many
  677. cases of abduction by the ELN, which foments hatred, and since the State is
  678. unable to resolve these situations, landowners or cattle breeders resort to
  679. the use of paramilitary groups. Lastly, the Minister stated that when a trade
  680. unionist is persecuted for suspected guerrilla activity, the State attempts to
  681. protect him, but it cannot prevent murders or acts of violence from being
  682. committed sometimes because a trade union is suspected of having links with
  683. the guerrilla movement.
  684. Social partners
  685. The representatives of the Single Confederation of Workers of Colombia (CUT)
  686. stated with regard to violence that they wished to emphasize the subject of
  687. impunity. Specifically, they pointed out that: (1) some acts of violence were
  688. investigated, but not when trade union leaders were involved; and (2) they
  689. were suffering from the tendency to penalize the social struggle, since any
  690. social action was seen as guerrilla activity. According to these
  691. representatives, it was the paramilitary groups which attacked the CUT most
  692. often, and these groups acted on the orders of the army, drug traffickers or
  693. employers. The regions in which the highest number of acts of violence are
  694. committed against CUT officers and members are Urabá, South of Cesar,
  695. Barrancabermeja, Sucre and the Magdalena regions, where acts of violence arise
  696. out of land ownership issues or social activism by the workers. They stated
  697. that in El Valle attempts had been made to eradicate the trade unions since
  698. 1989. The army was arresting trade unionists and accusing them of guerrilla
  699. activity and of having committed subversive acts. Trade union officers were
  700. being threatened into leaving their jobs. In many cases the threats are made
  701. by the army.
  702. According to the representatives of the General Confederation of Democratic
  703. Workers (CGTD), it was CUT members and officers who had been hit the hardest
  704. by acts of violence against the trade union movement; they considered that
  705. this was due to their political affiliation or sympathies or was merely on
  706. account of their trade union activities. According to these representatives,
  707. acts of violence affecting the trade union movement were committed mainly by
  708. the guerrilla movement or paramilitary groups. They stated that the latter
  709. were backed in the various regions by the military, the police or employers.
  710. The representatives of the Confederation of Workers of Colombia (CTC) stated
  711. that violence was widespread, and that the labour and trade union movements
  712. were targeted by acts of violence because they had taken up the workers'
  713. defence. They stated that CTC officers and members had also been victims of
  714. violence, but that it was not possible to determine who the perpetrators were,
  715. because of the impunity that reigned in the country. They stated that in Urabá
  716. some 15 years before, the CTC had been the only organized confederation, but
  717. that as a result of the violence, its presence had been considerably reduced.
  718. They informed the mission that trade union officers and members were still
  719. being murdered and that in the coffee-growing region of Caldas in particular
  720. few trade unions had been set up for fear of violence, since people were
  721. afraid of being branded as guerrillas if they carried out trade union
  722. activities.
  723. According to the representative of the Single Agricultural Trade Union
  724. Federation (FENSUAGRO) (one of the organizations, along with SINTRAINAGRO,
  725. which has been hit hardest by violence in Colombia), what they want from the
  726. Government is a clear stand on dismantling paramilitary groups. He felt that
  727. there was not the political will to dismantle the paramilitary groups
  728. operating in regions such as Urabá, Córdoba, Chocó, Meta or Magdalena Medio.
  729. The representative stated that attempts were being made to legalize the
  730. paramilitary groups through proposals to set up security cooperatives. He
  731. stated that in Urabá the paramilitary groups were formed of persons without
  732. links to the military, but that they were trained by the army. Lastly, he
  733. pointed out that the violence targeted the trade union movement, that workers
  734. wishing to set up a trade union had to do so secretly and that all human
  735. rights organizations were accused of being subversive, not only trade
  736. unionists. (The representative of the organization handed the mission
  737. extensive documents giving an account of acts of violence perpetrated on trade
  738. unionists and workers in various areas of the country, but mainly in the
  739. banana-growing area of Urabá).
  740. The representatives of the National Association of Manufacturers (ANDI) stated
  741. that violence permeated all areas of society and that disputes were usually
  742. settled through violence, since the State was unable to meet the security
  743. needs of the population. They pointed out that the sluggishness of judicial
  744. procedures meant that people were unwilling to wait for a solution to come
  745. from the authorities, or to tolerate the situation of violence. They pointed
  746. our that the violence was perpetrated by subversive left-wing movements that
  747. had subsequently converted into drug traffickers/guerrilla fighters with a
  748. change in orientation, which came into conflict with paramilitary forces (they
  749. also referred to organized gangs of common criminals). Lastly, as regards the
  750. impact of violence on the employers' sector, they stated that although they
  751. had better means of personal protection, they had to spend large amounts of
  752. resources on defending themselves. Employers were also targeted by many
  753. threats and attacks, but it was very difficult to determine their origin.
  754. 3. Information obtained (see Appendix IV for the observations communicated in
  755. each case by the Government to the mission)
  756. As regards the allegations of acts of violence committed against trade union
  757. officers and members (Cases Nos. 1761 and 1787), the Office of the General
  758. Prosecutor and the National Human Rights Unit provided extensive
  759. documentation. They stated that it was extremely difficult to obtain
  760. information, since all of the national prosecutors had to be contacted
  761. individually to elicit information on the cases in which complaints had been
  762. made. They pointed out that in many regions the prosecutors were unable to
  763. carry out inquiries as a result of acts of violence targeted against them, or
  764. because of the situation of conflict between the national army and the
  765. guerrilla movement. It should be emphasized that the authorities committed
  766. themselves to pursuing the inquiries, in order to be able to provide as much
  767. information as possible to the Committee on Freedom of Association.
  768. As regards the allegations of anti-union discrimination which had remained
  769. pending in Cases Nos. 1787 and 1896, the authorities of the Ministry of Labour
  770. have provided information (see Appendix IV).
  771. VI. Reflections and concluding remarks
  772. Although it is not unusual to find different forms of concertation in South
  773. America, this issue is more important in the Republic of Colombia because of
  774. the special circumstances prevailing there. Social concertation is an element
  775. which has perhaps not been sufficiently emphasized. Closer cooperation between
  776. capital and labour would bring tangible improvements to the climate of
  777. peaceful coexistence and would make an important contribution to establishing
  778. a culture of peace to replace the culture of war. With this in mind, it would
  779. seem logical to point out the need for tangible results if this valuable
  780. instrument is not to be discredited, especially in view of the fact that in
  781. its interviews with some of the social partners the mission heard that some
  782. initiatives to achieve consensus on proposed regulations involved months of
  783. negotiations and did not produce results.
  784. Another institutional element which seems to need strengthening is the
  785. judiciary. As is the case in other countries of South America, it is extremely
  786. important to have a justice system that is autonomous, flexible and accessible
  787. as an instrument which the population is able to trust not only because of its
  788. independence but also because of its efficiency and technical capacity. If the
  789. population becomes disenchanted with the justice system, it can be assumed
  790. that this will be an additional incentive to resort to violence as a means of
  791. settling disputes, even individual ones. In the labour field, the mission did
  792. not fail to notice the fact that according to the information obtained there
  793. are few labour tribunals, at least in the city of Bogotá. In a city with over
  794. 7 million inhabitants there are only 16 labour courts of the first instance.
  795. As part of the solution to the problem, emphasis should also be laid on the
  796. need to stop identifying the trade union movement with communism or left-wing
  797. extremism, especially in a context in which different sources assert that
  798. left-wing guerrilla groups are involved in drug trafficking, although one
  799. cannot talk of drug traffickers as a single category, but only of certain
  800. fronts or sections of the drug trade. (Endnote 10)
  801. Despite the crisis caused by violence and the political situation,
  802. institutions are being maintained. This is probably due to the stable
  803. equilibrium of checks and balances between the different powers of the State.
  804. While the executive power has the backing of the parliamentary majority, there
  805. are other power centres, many of which are jurisdictional, such as the
  806. Constitutional Court, the Office of the General Prosecutor, the Supreme Court
  807. of Justice, the Attorney General's Office, etc., which form an institutional
  808. framework of bodies that are independent of one another, and which seems to
  809. contribute effectively to maintaining political stability. In this respect,
  810. this can be said to be a country in which there is democratic rule of law, and
  811. one which has not had a military government in decades - the last coup d'état
  812. occurred in 1953 - making it an exception in the Latin American context.
  813. (Endnote 11)
  814. Although it can be said that for a country at war Colombia is a country in
  815. which democracy prevails, the General Prosecutor was also right in saying that
  816. the encouraging climate of democracy cannot conceal the weaknesses of
  817. democratic institutions and the difficulties in the way of strengthening them.
  818. He added that: There are deficiencies in the institutional and normative
  819. framework which limit the effectiveness of state institutions, restrict
  820. citizens' involvement and undermine the credibility of democratic
  821. institutions. This is why in recent years the country has moved increasingly
  822. towards a consensus concerning the importance of governability to support the
  823. consistent practice of sustained and equitable development. At the same time a
  824. reciprocal phenomenon has occurred, which is the process of strengthening
  825. civil society in terms of autonomy, directly linked to greater responsibility
  826. and activism of both social and political organizations and of citizens acting
  827. individually or in associations in the social, economic and political fields.
  828. The main challenge facing democracy if it is to remain in place as a standard
  829. of conduct and action of our States is to ensure that economic growth goes
  830. hand in hand with equity and that democracy in practice means the full
  831. exercise of citizenship.
  832. Specifically with regard to the relationship between economic well-being and
  833. democratic co-existence, the former Ombudsman pointed out that "the growth
  834. achieved by the Colombian economy compared to most Latin American economies
  835. has not been translated into benefits for the population; the social debt' of
  836. the Colombian State towards its citizens has increased; there has been a
  837. deterioration in the situation with regard to human rights, in terms of
  838. economic, social and cultural rights". He points out that there is a poor
  839. distribution of income and that in addition to the failure of growth to help
  840. mitigate poverty, it has been accompanied by an increased concentration of
  841. wealth.
  842. In his acceptance speech on being awarded an Honorary Ph.D from the University
  843. of Boston on 2 October 1996, General Prosecutor Valdivieso stated that: The
  844. relationship between justice and development is one of the most important
  845. emergencies of the moment in Latin America. Another is the sound exercise of
  846. the judiciary system, which has proven invaluable in consolidating the cause
  847. of democracy. The emergence of criminal organizations with unlimited economic
  848. resources has been more that a match for a state apparatus which is unable to
  849. cope with the magnitude of the problem. Add to this obsolete methods of
  850. dealing with public problems, inadequate means of state administration, errors
  851. in the design of public policies, an outworn legal framework and a weak
  852. judiciary, and this is enough to make one overwhelmed with scepticism. But
  853. what is worse, the absence of an institutional approach in the exercise of the
  854. State's function has opened the way to unlawful practices sponsored by
  855. organized crime, which have eroded the credibility of the political
  856. leadership. We in Colombia are now regretting our failure to deal decisively
  857. with the first manifestations of this phenomenon. Excessive tolerance,
  858. permissiveness and irresponsible ignorance of our role in rejecting it has led
  859. to this tragic situation which we are now beginning to overcome.
  860. What we should like to emphasize in the above is the importance of functioning
  861. of the judiciary. A consensus emerged from several interviews to the effect
  862. that peaceful conflict resolution, dialogue between persons with conflicting
  863. interests, and in general terms, everything that contributes to building a
  864. culture of peace, are all based on a jurisdictional system that is flexible
  865. and efficient, and one on which the parties to the dispute feel they can rely.
  866. As was pointed our by various state authorities, it is obviously urgently
  867. necessary to find civilized ways of managing conflict, which will also serve
  868. the general interest. If it cannot be overcome, at least it should be feasible
  869. to create conditions to prevent it so as to avert de facto situations that
  870. constitute formidable obstacles in the way of peaceful coexistence in the
  871. conditions currently prevailing in Colombia. "Dialogue is first and foremost a
  872. permanent learning process which not only contributes to overcoming conflict,
  873. but also leads to a better management of the enterprise and society as a
  874. whole." (Endnote 12)
  875. I should like to conclude this report by extending special thanks for the
  876. assistance provided to me in the mission by Mr. Horacio Guido, who prepared
  877. the mission and possesses an exhaustive knowledge of the Colombian cases
  878. before the Committee on Freedom of Association, as well as the legislative
  879. aspects. I should also like to express my gratitude for the presence of Mr.
  880. Luis Zamudio, whose assistance was invaluable in helping me find my way in the
  881. country and conducting the various interviews more effectively.
  882. I should also like to highlight the very high level of cooperation on the part
  883. of the authorities interviewed and the social partners, and to thank them for
  884. all the assistance provided.
  885. There can be no doubt as to the interest and willingness of the Minister of
  886. Labour and Social Security with regard to solving all the problems raised by
  887. the Committee of Experts on the Application of Conventions and Recommendations
  888. in the context of the application of Conventions Nos. 87 and 98. Specifically,
  889. in connection with the mission (before, during or immediately following the
  890. mission) two important Bills emerged (one of them, on collective bargaining in
  891. the public sector, has already been submitted to Congress), together with a
  892. commitment to discuss them in depth in Congress; if they are adopted as they
  893. stand, these Bills will overcome the problems raised by the Committee of
  894. Experts, except for those relating to strikes in essential services, which are
  895. being dealt with in a draft Bill concerning which discussions and
  896. consultations are currently being held.
  897. Moreover, the desire to promote trade union rights prompted ministry
  898. authorities, during the mission, to submit to Congress Bills providing for the
  899. ratification of Conventions Nos. 144 and 151, together with a commitment to
  900. submit to Congress a Bill concerning ratification of Convention No. 135.
  901. As regards the cases still pending before the Committee on Freedom of
  902. Association, there is considerable reason for concern at the climate of
  903. violence prevailing in the country and affecting all population groups, but
  904. with especially severe repercussions for trade union officers and members. The
  905. causes underlying this violence, which also affects employers, officials of
  906. the judiciary, journalists, politicians and citizens in general, are extremely
  907. complex, and although the Government and Congress have adopted and continue to
  908. adopt measures to limit the extent of violence (protection programmes for
  909. witnesses or persons who have been threatened, put in place by the Office of
  910. the General Prosecutor, the setting up of a National Human Rights Unit, etc.)
  911. the number of victims is extraordinarily high and judicial inquiries are
  912. marked by an extremely high degree of impunity. Another cause for concern is
  913. the spread in many areas of the country of paramilitary groups or self-defence
  914. units whose acts of violence are added to those committed by drug traffickers,
  915. the guerrilla movement, common criminals, and institutionalized violence
  916. committed by members of the security forces.
  917. The authorities and the social partners are aware of these serious problems,
  918. but it is obvious that the problem of violence, apart from new measures and
  919. financing, can only be effectively dealt within a wider context: that of
  920. achieving social peace, which can only be based on social justice and a
  921. gradual elimination of the social conditions leading to injustice, poverty and
  922. deprivation. The ideas expressed in the Constitution of the ILO are just as
  923. relevant today as they were in 1919.
  924. November 1996. Santiago Pérez del Castillo
  925. Appendix I
  926. List of persons interviewed
  927. Ministry of Labour and Social Security
  928. His Excellency Mr. Orlando Obregón Sabogal, Minister of Labour and Social
  929. Security
  930. Mr. Angelino Garzón, Adviser to the Minister of Labour and Social Security
  931. Mr. Orlando Rodríguez, Technical Director of Labour
  932. Mr. Gabriel Mesa Cárdenas, Director of the Office of International Affairs
  933. Mr. Jorge Quiroz Aleman, Head of the Legal Office
  934. Mr. Rafael Angel Celis, Regional Director/Cundinamarca
  935. Mr. Oscar Moreno López, Head of the Labour Division/Cundinamarca
  936. Ms. María Teresa Lozada, Assistant Head of the Office of International Affairs
  937. Office of the General Prosecutor
  938. Mr. Alfonso Valdivieso, General Prosecutor
  939. Mr. Gonzalo Gómez, Adviser of the Office of International Affairs
  940. National Human Rights Unit
  941. The mission met with a Regional Prosecutor (one of the "faceless"
  942. prosecutor's) whose name cannot be revealed because of the nature of his
  943. duties (if his identity were revealed it could make him a target of
  944. reprisals).
  945. Ministry of Foreign Relations
  946. Ms. Gloria Elsa León, Human Rights Office
  947. Mr. Germán Grisales, Section dealing with specific issues
  948. President's Office for Human Rights
  949. Mr. Gustavo Fernández, Adviser on cases
  950. Constitutional Court
  951. Mr. Carlos Gaviria Díaz, President
  952. Mr. Alejandro Martínez Caballero, Vice-President
  953. Supreme Court of Justice-Labour Court of Cassation
  954. Messrs. Iván Palacio, Escobar Enríquez, Méndez and Vásquez Valdez
  955. Office of the Ombudsman
  956. Mr. José Fernando Castro, Ombudsman
  957. Ministry of Justice and Law
  958. H.E. Mr. Carlos Medellín Becerra, Minister of Justice and Law
  959. Ms. Sandra Alzate, Director-General of International Affairs
  960. Ms. Alicia María Londoño, Adviser of the Assistance Office
  961. Standing Committee on Concertation of Wage and Social Policies, United Nations
  962. Development Programme (UNDP)
  963. Mr. Carlos del Castillo, Resident Representative
  964. Workers' organizations
  965. Single Confederation of Workers (CUT)
  966. Mr. Luis Garzón, Secretary General
  967. Ms. Bertina Calderón, Vice-President
  968. Mr. Héctor José López, Treasurer
  969. Mr. William Arlez Escobar, President of SINTRASIDELPA
  970. Ms. Castro, Treasurer of the National Federation of State Workers (FENALTRASE)
  971. General Confederation of Democratic Workers of Colombia (CGTD)
  972. Mr. Mario Valderrama, President
  973. Mr. Carlos Bedoya Tavarez, Vice-President
  974. Mr. Julio Roberto Gómez Esguerra, Secretary General
  975. Mr. José Trujillo, Political Affairs
  976. Mr. Mario Fernández, Deputy Secretary General
  977. Mr. Bautista, Treasurer
  978. Mr. Nelson Caballero Herrera, Secretary of Affairs relating to Social Security
  979. and Family Benefit Funds
  980. Confederation of Workers of Colombia (CTC)
  981. Mr. Apecides Alviz, President
  982. Mr. Miguel Morantes, Secretary General
  983. Ms. Luz Mary González, Secretary for Women's Affairs
  984. Single Agricultural Trade Union Federation (FENSUAGRO)
  985. Mr. Víctor Julio Garzón, Secretary General
  986. Single Federation of State and Public Service Salaried Employees and
  987. Professionals (FUTEC)
  988. Mr. Ricardo Díaz, President
  989. Mr. Fernando Dávila Villamizar, National Treasurer
  990. Employers' organizations
  991. National Association of Manufacturers (ANDI)
  992. Mr. Alberto Echevarría Saldarriaga, Vice-President for Legal and Social
  993. Affairs
  994. Ms. Carmen Ramírez Vanegas, Head of Labour Law Department
  995. National Federation of Merchants (FENALCO)
  996. Ms. Jimena Peñafort, Officer and Legal Adviser
  997. Colombian Association of Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (ACOPI)
  998. Mr. José Miguel Carrillo Méndez, National Vice-President
  999. (Appendices II, III and IV not reproduced.)
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